hotium. p. 443. and Scholia Dionysii. v. 517. [Greek:
Eiche de hieron Herakleous he Thasos, hupo ton auton Phoinikon hidruthen,
hoi pleusantes kata zetesin tes Europes ten Thason ektisan.]
[1078] Diodorus Sic. l. 5. p. 323.
[1079] Nonnus. l. 3. p. 86. Priene in Ionia called Cadmia. Strabo. l. 14.
p. 943.
[1080] Lycophron. v. 219.
[1081] Steph. Byzant.
[1082] Nonnus. p. 86.
[1083] Auri metalla et conflaturam Cadmus Phoenix (invenit) ad Pangaeum
montem. Plin. l. 7. c. 56. [Greek: Kadmos, kai Telephassa en Thrakei
katokesan.] Apollodorus. l. 3. p. 130.
[1084] Plin. l. 34. c. 10. Hygin. f. 274.
[1085] Strabo. l. 14. p. 998.
[1086] Ibid. l. 10. p. 685.
[1087] Pausanias. l. 3. p. 245.
[1088] Herodotus. l. 5. c. 61.
[1089] Cedrenus. p. 23.
[1090] Apollodorus. l. 3. p. 143. Pausan. l. 9. p. 719.
[1091] Stephanus Byzantin.
[1092] Thucydid. l. 1. c. 5, 6.
[1093]
[Greek: Para Tritonidi limnei]
[Greek: Harmonie parelekto rhodopidi Kadmos aletes.] Nonnus. l. 13. p.
372.
Diodorus says that he married her in Samothracia. l. 5. p. 323.
[1094] Nonnus. l. 13. p. 372.
[1095] Nonnus. l. 13. p. 370.
[1096] Stephanus Byzant. The Carthaginians are by Silius Italicus styled
Cadmeans.
Sacri cum perfida pacti
Gens Cadmea super regno certamina movit. l. 1. v. 5.
[1097] L. 1. c. 9, 10. p. 26. l. 2. c. 4. p. 87.
[1098] Moses Choren. l. 1. c. 9. p. 26. There was a city Cadmea in Cilicia.
[Greek: Kadmeia ektisthe kai Side en Kilikia.] Eusebii Chron. p. 30. l. 23.
[1099] Stephanus Byzant. Some think that this is a mistake for [Greek:
Kalchedon], Chalcedon. But Chalcedon was not in Armenia, nor in its
vicinity.
[1100] Cadmus was coeval with Dardanus. He was in Samothrace before the
foundation of Troy. Diodorus Sicul. l. 5. p. 323. Yet he is said to be
contemporary with the Argonauts: Clemens Alexandrinus Strom. l. 1. p. 382.
and posterior to Tiresias, who was in the time of Epigonoi. Yet Tiresias is
said to have prophesied of Cadmus, and his offspring.
[Greek: polla de Kadmoi]
[Greek: Chresei, kai megalois hustera Labdakidais]
Callimachi Lavacra Palladis. v. 125.
The son of Cadmus is supposed to have lived at the time of the Trojan war:
Lycophron. v. 217. and Scholia. His daughter Semele is said to have been
sixteen hundred years before Herodotus, by that writer's own account. l. 2
c. 145. She was at th
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