402 STRABO. CASATJB. 625. possession of the Bosporus. He had a great reputation as well as Apollodorus the rhetorician, who composed a work on the Art of Rhetoric, and was the head of the Apollodorian sect of philosophers, whatever that may be; for many opinions have prevailed, the merits of which are beyond our power to decide upon, among which are those of the sects of Apollodorus and Theodorus. But the friendship of Augustus Ca3sar, whom he instructed in oratory, was the principal cause of the elevation of Apollo- dorus. He had a celebrated scholar Dionysius, surnamed Atticus, his fellow-citizen, who was an able teacher of philo- sophy, an historian, and composer of orations. 4. Proceeding from the plain and the city towards the east, we meet with Apollonia, a city on an elevated site. To the south is a mountainous ridge, which having crossed on the road to Sardes, we find on the left hand the city Thya- teira, a colony of the Macedonians, which some authors say is the last city belonging to the Mysians. On the right hand is Apollonis, 300 stadia from Pergamum, and the same distance from Sardes. It has its name from Apollonis of Cyzicus (wife of Attalus). Next are the plains of Hermus and Sar- des. The country to the north of Pergamum is principally occupied by Mysians ; it lies on the right hand of the people called Abaitas, on whose borders is the Epictetus, extending to Bithynia. 5. Sardes is a large city, of later date than the Trojan times, yet ancient, with a strong citadel. It was the royal seat of the Lydians, whom the poet calls Meones, and later writers Masones, some asserting that they are the same, others that they are a different people, but the former is the preferable opinion. Above Sardes is the Traolus, a fertile mountain having on its summit a seat 1 of white marble, a work of the Persians. There is a view from it of the plains around, particularly of that of the Cayster. There dwell about it Lydians, My- sians, and Macedonians. 2 1 tlfya. The exhedra was that part of the building added to the portico, and, according to Vitruvius, when spacious it consisted of three parts, and was provided with seats. It probably here means a place for sitting and resting, protected by a covering supported by columns, so as to afford a view all round. 3 Pliny also places Macedonians, surnamed Cadueni, near Tmolus. B. v. c. 29.