9. fietidea ihe abore, there an rnina which aMio Ube those oi a TViaiJrs. and also tha remiiiuofa gTHt boilding, appareatlf the largest in the dtj, which Barth conjectnru to be the temple uf Coelestis. Theae ruin* comllt, lite the r«t, onlj of bnAea foondadHu. (Barth, 105, 106.) 10. The Soburh of M^ara, Magar, or Hagaltaf afterwirda oonudered ai a quarter S Ihe dtj, ander thenameof lbeNewCit7(N«(TsAii),waaBarToillKled bj a wall oT ita own, and adorned with beaDiifal garden!, watered bj canals. (Diod. ii. M Appian-viii. 117; Sery. ad Virg. Am. I 372; laidor. fijm. IT. 12.) It seemi to have occnpied Ihe eite on the KW. Bide of the penuuula. now called EUMrria, ' and ttJI the site of Ihe beaaCiful gardeaa of the wealth; ciliieni of Tonie. 11. Wwropoits.— From the few psTes fonnfl i the rocky soil of the hill of C. Ghamart, it seenprobable that here waa the ancient necropolii, N. i tile <atj, apoetin nwh h tu freqaen Ij if nc fenerellj, found n ether an ent citea Then ii however, some donbt on the matte wh ch the evi PLAN OF CARTHAGE ACCORDING TO RITTER. |
It baa b«i alieadj' intimated that the Tiewi now stated are those onlj of one party tiaaag the peograpbere and scbelan who bava studied the topography of Carthage. Of thor general toTToctneM, we are more and mora convinced; but it seema only fur to th«e who desire to pnreue the subject further to exhibit Ihe nanlta of the oppwte views, in the form of the above (jimiDd-plan, copied bom the Adca Antiqutit of Spnuier, who baa taken it traia the Erdkmdt of Kul Bitter. A very complete plan of the mina in their preaent state, by Falbe, is givea ui the periodkal entitled Attend, lor 1836, No. ISS. [ P. S. ]
Iti eiination wu meat admirable, lying ai it did near the middle of the Meditemincan (or, aa the ancients chooae to call it, the S.) cuatt of Spain, at a moat convenient position for the passage to AfHca (i. e. the Carthaginian temlory), and having the only good harbour on that coast (Polyb. it. 13. i. '; Strah. iii. p. 158; Liv. uvi. 42.) Polyllaa itimites its distance from the Colomns of Hercula at 3000 stadia, and from the Ibems (£6ro) 2600 (iii. 39). Scipio's army look seven dayj to reach it from the Ebro, both by land and sea (Polyb. i. 9; U*. uvi. 4!); but at another lime ten days. (Liv. Iiviii. 32.) Stribo makea ita diatancs along the coast from Calpe 2600 stadia (iii. p 156), ud from Massilii {Maruiilt) above 6000; and, acraea the Hediterranean, to the opporale cafe of Melagonium, on Ihe coast of the Uaaaeayli, 3000 stadia (iviii. pp.827,828, fromTimoBtheiie8;Lii. uviii. 17). Pliny (iii. 3.8. 4) gives 187 M.P.fbr the distance from the neighbouring headland Satami Pr. (C. dt Palof) to Caesareia in Uauretaniiu The Mariliroe Itineraty gives 3000 stadia to Caoareia, and 400 stadia to the island of Ebuaus (/Jw. AnL pp. 496, 511). New Carthage stood a little W. of the proniontory!t named (C. di Pidoi), U. the bottom of a bay 'knking to the S., in the mouth of which lay an island (Herculjs or Scombraria 1.*), which shdtered u p. 159 1 SJce/iCpoffk, |
Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography Volume I Part 1.djvu/570
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.