a river of Phrygia Major, which, together with the Lycus, washes Laodicea, (Pliny.)—Another of Berota, which running from Mount Citheron, and watering the territory of Thebes, separates it from the territory of Platæa, and falls with an east course into the Euripus, at Tanagra. On this river Adrastus king of Sicyon built a temple to Nemesis, thence called Adraestia. From this river Thebes came to be named Alopides, (Strabo.) It is now called Alop. A third Alopus, a river of Peloponnesus, which runs by Sicyon, (Strabo;) and with a north-west course falls into the Sinus Corinthiacus, to the west of Corinth.—A fourth, a small river of the Locri Epizephiri, on the borders of Thelytai, (Pliny;) rising in Mount Oeta, and falling into the Sinus Maliaicus.
a town of Laconia, (Pausanias;) on the Sinus Laconicus, with a port in a peninsula, between Boe to the east, and the mouth of the Eurotas to the west. The citadel only remains standing, now called by the sailors Cañel Rampano.