Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface.
- Contents
- Map
- CHAPTER I Journey from Constantinople to Kónia
- CHAPTER II Illustration of the Ancient Gography of the Central Part of Asia Minor
- CHAPTER III Continuation of the Journey.—From Kánia to Cyprus, Alaia, and Shughut
- CHAPTER IV Of the ancient places on the road from Adalia to Shughut, including remarks on the comparative geography of the adjacent country
- CHAPTER V Of the ancient places on the southern coast of Asia Minor
- CHAPTER VI Some remarks on the comparative geography of the western and northern parts of Asia Minor
- Notes
- Index
CHAPTER VI - Some remarks on the comparative geography of the western and northern parts of Asia Minor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface.
- Contents
- Map
- CHAPTER I Journey from Constantinople to Kónia
- CHAPTER II Illustration of the Ancient Gography of the Central Part of Asia Minor
- CHAPTER III Continuation of the Journey.—From Kánia to Cyprus, Alaia, and Shughut
- CHAPTER IV Of the ancient places on the road from Adalia to Shughut, including remarks on the comparative geography of the adjacent country
- CHAPTER V Of the ancient places on the southern coast of Asia Minor
- CHAPTER VI Some remarks on the comparative geography of the western and northern parts of Asia Minor
- Notes
- Index
Summary
It remains to submit to the reader some observations in justification of the ancient names in the western and northern parts of the map which accompanies the present volume. It will not be necessary to enter into this part of the subject so fully as into those which have already been under consideration. The western provinces, in consequence of their celebrity and greater advantages of climate, soil, and situation, have been more fully described, both by ancient and modern writers; so that, in conducting the reader to the results recorded on the map, a general reference on the one hand to the travellers whose routes are there marked, and on the other to the ancient historians, geographers, and itineraries, will be sufficient. In those instances only, it may be necessary to be more particular, where the ancient positions are determined by less obvious authorities or by unpublished documents, or where the question is rendered doubtful by deficient or conflicting evidence. As to the north-eastern part of the peninsula, we must be contented with a brief notice of its geography, for a reason the reverse of that which induces me to abridge the geographical notice of the provinces bordering on the Ægæan sea.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Journal of a Tour in Asia MinorWith Comparative Remarks on the Ancient and Modern Geography of That Country, pp. 219 - 312Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1824