CHAP. 26. (22.)—DALMATIA.
Scardona, situate upon the river1, at a distance of twelve miles from the sea, forms the boundary of Liburnia and the beginning of Dalmatia. Next to this place comes the ancient country of the Autariatares and the fortress of Tariona, the Promontory of Diomedes2, or, as others call it, the peninsula of Hyllis, 100 miles3 in circuit. Then comes Tragurium, a place with the rights of Roman citizens, and celebrated for its marble, Sicum, a place to which Claudius, the emperor lately deified, sent a colony of his veterans, and Salona4, a colony, situate 112 miles from ladera. To this place resort for legal purposes, having the laws dispensed according to their divisions into decuries or tithings, the Dahmatæ, forming 342 decuries, the Deurici 22, the Ditiones 239, the Mazæi 269, and the Sardiates 52. In this region are Burnum5, Andetrium6, and Tribulium, fortresses ennobled by the battles of the Roman people. To the same jurisdiction also belong the Issæi7, the Colentini, the Separi, and the Epetini, nations inhabiting the islands. After these come the fortresses of Peguntium8 and of Rataneum, with the colony of Narona9, the seat of the third jurisdiction, distant from Salona eighty-two miles, and situate upon a river of the same name, at a distance of twenty miles from the sea. M. Varro states that eighty-nine states used to resort thither, but now nearly the only ones that are known are the Cerauni10 with 24 decuries, the Daorizi with 17, the Dæsitiates with 103, the Docleatæ with 33, the Deretini with 14, the Deremistæ with 30, the Dindari with 33, the Glinditiones with 44, the Melcomani with 24, the Naresii with 102, the Scirtarii with 72, the Siculotæ with 24, and the Vardæi, once the scourges of Italy, with no more than 20 decuries. In addition to these, this district was possessed by the Ozuæi, the Partheni, the Hemasini, the Arthitæ, and the Armistæ. The colony of Epidaurum11 is distant from the river Naron 100 miles. After Epidaurum come the following towns, with the rights of Roman citizens:—Rhizinium12, Acruvium13, Butua, Olcinium, formerly called Colchinium, having been founded by the Colchians; the river Drilo14, and, upon it, Scodra15, a town with the rights of Roman citizens, situate at a distance of eighteen miles from the sea; besides in former times many Greek towns and once powerful states, of which all remem- brance is fast fading away. For in this region there were formerly the Labeatæ, the Enderini16, the Sasæi, the Grabæi17, properly called Illyrii, the Taulantii18, and the Pyrei. The Promontory of Nymphæum on the sea-coast still retains its name19; and there is Lissum, a town enjoying the rights of Roman citizens, at a distance from Epidaurum of 100 miles.(23.) At Lissum begins the province of Macedonia20, the nations of the Parthini21, and behind them the Dassaretæ22. The mountains of Candavia23 are seventy-eight miles from Dyrrhachium. On the coast lies Denda, a town with the rights of Roman citizens, the colony of Epidamnum24, which, on account of its inauspicious name, was by the Romans called Dyrrhachium, the river Aöus25, by' some called Æas, and Apollonia26, formerly a colony of the Corinthians, at a distance of four miles from the sea, in the vicinity of which the celebrated Nymphæum27 is inhabited by the barbarous Amantes28 and Buliones. Upon the coast too is the town of Oricum29, founded by the Colchians. At this spot begins Epirus, with the Acroceraunian30 mountains, by which we have previously mentioned31 this Gulf of Europe as bounded. Oricum is distant from the Promontory of Salentinum in Italy eighty32 miles.