Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/204

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196 STRABO. CASATJB. 476, calling it vast, and the palace of Minos. It maintained its pre-eminence for a long period. It afterwards lost its ascend- ency, and was deprived of many of its customs and privi- leges. The superiority was transferred to Gortyna and Lyc- tus. 1 But it afterwards recovered its ancient rank of the capital city. Cnossus lies in a plain, with its ancient circum- ference of 30 stadia, between the Lyctian and Gortynian territory ; [distant] 200 stadia from Gortyna, and from Lyt- tus 120, which the poet 2 calls Lyctus. Cnossus is at the dis- tance of 25 stadia from the northern sea ; Gortyna 90, and Lyctus 80, stadia from the African sea. Cnossus has a marine arsenal, Heracleium. 3 8. Minos, it is said, used as an arsenal Amnisus, 4 where is a temple of Eileithyia. Cnossus formerly had the name of Casratus, which is the name of the river 5 which runs beside it. Minos 6 is regarded as an excellent legislator, and the first who possessed the sovereignty of the sea. He divided the island into three portions, in each of which he built a city ; Cnossus ****** * ? 7 opposite to Peloponnesus, which lies toward the north. According to Ephorus, Minos was an imitator of Rhada- manthus, an ancient personage, and a most just man. He had the same name as his brother, who appears to have been the first to civilize the island by laws and institutions, by founding cities, and by establishing forms of government. He pre- tended to receive from Jupiter the decrees which he promul- gated. It was probably in imitation of Rhadamanthus that Minos went up to the cave of Jupiter, at intervals of nine years, and brought from thence a set of ordinances, which he said were the commands of Jove ; for which reason the poet thus expresses himself; " There reigned Minos, who every ninth year conversed with the great Jupiter." 8 1 Lytto. 2 II. ii. 647. 3 Cartero, a maritime town on the river of the same name. 4 At the mouth of the Aposelemi. 5 Now the Cartero. 6 Pausanias, b. ix. c. 11, says that the ships of Minos were unprovided with sails, which were the subsequent invention of Daedalus. 7 Groskurd proposes to supply the hiatus in the text thus : Cnossus [towards the north, inclining to the ^Egeean sea, Phaestus turned towards the south and the African sea, Cydonia in the western part of the island] opposite. 8 Od. xix. 178.