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LIVADIA

Volume 17 · 215 words · 1810 Edition

anciently Achaia and Hellas, or Greece properly so called; a province of Turkey in Europe, bounded on the north by Epirus and Thessaly, from which it is separated by Mount Oeta, now Banina, and by the Euripus, now the strait of Negropont; on the east, by the Archipelago; on the south, by the gulf of Egina or Egina, the isthmus of Corinth, and the gulf of Lepanto; and on the west, by the Ionian sea and part of Epirus. Its extent is about 130 miles from north-west to south-east; but its greatest breadth is not above 36 miles. It is in general a mountainous country; but neither unpleasing nor unfruitful. The principal mountains are, Mount Oeta in Boeotia, where is the famous pass of Thermopylae, not above 25 feet broad; and Parnassus, Helicon, and Cytharion in Phocis, which were sacred to Apollo and the muses, and consequently much celebrated by the poets. The rivers of most note are, the Sionapro, anciently the Achelous, the Cephissus, the Imenus, and the Alpheus. The province is at present divided into Livadia proper, Stramulippa, and the duchy of Athens. The principal places are, Lepanto, anciently Naupactus; Livadia, anciently Libadia or Lebadia; the celebrated city of Athens, now Setines; Thebes, now Stibes; Lepina, anciently Eleusis; Castris, formerly Delphi; and Megara.