[882] Strabo ix. 5. p. 433.
[883] Il. x. 239.
[884] Il. ix. 142, 284.
[885] Thuc. i. 13.
[886] Compare Il. ii. 540 with iv. 363.
[887] Thuc. i. 2.
[888] The name of Thessaly is not found in Homer; and it is marked by Thucydides as modern: ἡ νῦν Θεσσαλία καλουμένη. May it not be reasonably conjectured, that when the great Dorian tribe had evacuated Hellas to reconquer the Peloponnesus, this Thessalid branch of the Heraclidæ, which had migrated to the south-east, went back thither, and imparted to it the name of their ancestor?
[889] Cramer i. 360.
[890] Il. iv. 202.
[891] Il. ii. 641.
[892] Il. vi. 152, compared with ii. 570.
[893] Il. ii. 659, 60, and xi. 689, 91.
[894] New Cratylus, ch. iv. p. 77.
[895] Hist. of Persia, ii. 507.
[896] Quart. Rev. vol. 101. p. 503.
[897] Malcolm’s Hist. chap. i. p. 1. n.
[898] Herod. i. 125.
[899] Ibid. 96.
[900] New Cratylus, p. 86.
[901] Blakesley on Herod, i. 104.
[902] New Cratylus, chap. iv. as above.
[903] New Cratylus, p. 92.
[904] Tac. Germ. c. 2. and Brotier’s note.
[905] Strabo vii. 2. p. 290.
[906] Il. iii. 166. cf. 226.
[907] Od. xi. 469.
[908] Il. xvii. 51.
[909] Il. v. 500.
[910] Propertius.
[911] Tac. Germ. i. 4.
[912] New Cratylus, p. 91.
[913] Clem. Alex. Strom. i. 299 C, and 308 A (Ed. Coloniæ 1688).
[914] Blakesley on Herod. i. 125.
[915] Il. xiv. 319.
[916] Od. iii. 414, 444.
[917] Od. ix. 139.
[918] Herod. vii. 61.
[919] Herod. vi. 53, 4.
[920] Strabo xi. 10. p. 516.
[921] Rev. G. Rawlinson’s Herodotus, vol. i. p. 264. note 5.
[923] vi. 54.
[924] Herod. i. 113.
[925] Tac. Germ. c. 9.
[926] Blakesley’s Herodotus, vol. i. 428. Exc. on iii. 74.
[927] Müller’s Comparative Mythology, p. 45, in Oxford Essays for 1856.
[928] Inf. Religion and Morals, sect. 3.
[929] iii. 16.
[930] Il. xviii. 394, et seqq.
[931] i. 138.
[932] This subject will be resumed in treating of the Trojans.
[933] Herod. i. 131.
[934] Malcolm’s Persia, vol. i. p. 185.
[935] Döllinger’s Heidenthum und Judenthum, vi. 2.
[936] See ‘The Religion of the Homeric Age,’ sect. ii.
[937] Il. iii. 276.
[938] Herod. vii. 114.
[939] i. 132.
[940] In loc.
[941] Herod i. 133, 135.
[942] Ibid. 134.
[943] Ibid.
[944] Il. ii. 235.
[945] Herod. i. 71, and ix. 122.
[946] Herod. vii. 19.
[947] Rawlinson’s Herodotus, Life, p. cxlviii. n.
[948] Herod. i. 135. iii. 16. v. 18.
[949] Photii Biblioth. Cod. lxxii.
[950] See Blakesley’s Excursus on Herod. iii. 74.
[951] Herod, ix. 122.
[952] Herod. iii. 89.
[953] Shakspeare’s Richard II.
[954] Thuc. i. 4.
[955] Ar. Pol. III. xiv. 3.
[956] Selden’s Titles of Honour, chap. ii.
[957] Malcolm’s Persia, ii. 585. 631, 6. Quarterly Review, vol. 101. p. 510.
[958] The traits mentioned in the text, where there is no special reference, are drawn from the three last chapters of Malcolm’s Persia.
[959] Malcolm’s Persia, ii. 550, 558, 566, 611.
[960] Ibid. 576. Grote’s History of Greece, P. I. c. xxi. vol. ii. p. 196 n.
[961] Ibid. 616, and Quart. Rev. p. 509.
[962] Quart. Rev. vol. 101. p. 509 n.
[963] Quart. Rev. vol. 101. p. 50.
[964] Malcolm, ii. 613.
[965] Malcolm, i. 369. ii. 597, 634, 638.
[966] Latham’s Man and his Migrations, pp. 33-6.
[967] History of Greece, vol. ii. p. 352.
[968] Leipsic, 1854, vol. i, ch. ii.