History of Julius Caesar Vol. 1 of 2. Napoleon III
seq., ed. Hudson.
250
See the work of Heeren,
251
Athenæus informs us that Polemon had composed an entire treatise on the mantles of the divinities of Carthage. (XII. lviii. 541.)
252
Herodotus, VII. 145. – Polybius, I. 67. – Titus Livius, XXVIII. 41.
253
Reckoning, after Titus Livius, her troops at the time of the second Punic War, we find a force of 291,000 foot and 9,500 horse. (Titus Livius, Books XXI. to XXIX.)
254
Carthage, under certain circumstances, could make daily a hundred and forty shields, three hundred swords, five hundred lances, and a thousand darts for catapults. (Strabo, XVII. iii. § 15.)
255
Strabo, XVII. iii. § 15.
256
In 513, 3,200 Euboic talents (18,627,200 francs [£745,088]); in 516, 1,200 talents (6,985,200 francs [£279,408]); in 552, 10,000 talents (58,210,000 francs [£2,328,400]). Scipio, the first Africanus, brought, besides this, 123,000 pounds weight of gold from this town. (Polybius, I. 62, 63, 88; XV. 18. – Titus Livius, XXX. 37, 45.)
257
Aristotle,
258
Diodorus Siculus, XX. 17.
259
Pliny,
260
Scylax of Caryanda,
261
Polybius, XII. 3.
262
Titus Livius, XXXIV. 62.
263
58,200 francs (£2,328). (Titus Livius, XXII. 31.)
264
Sallust,
265
Pliny, citing this fact, throws doubt upon it. (
266
Strabo, III. v. § 3.
267
Strabo, III. ii. § 1.
268
Pliny,
269
Strabo, III. ii. § 3. – Pliny, III. i. 3; XXXIII. vii. 40.
270
Above 25,000 francs [£1,000]. (Strabo, III. ii. § 10.)
271
767,695 pounds of silver and 10,918 pounds of gold, without reckoning what was furnished by certain partial impositions, sometimes very heavy, such as those of Marcolica, one million of sestertii (230,000 francs [£9,200]), and of Certima, 2,400,000 sestertii (550,000 francs [£22,000]). (See Books XXVIII. to XLVI. of Titus Livius.) Such were the resources of Spain, even in the smallest localities, that in 602, C. Marcellus imposed on a little town of the Celtiberians (
272
A fabulous people, spoken of by Homer. (Athenæus, I. xxviii. 60, edit. Schweighæuser.)
273
Diodorus Siculus, V. 34, 35.
274
Pliny,
275
In the time of Hannibal, this town was one of the richest in the peninsula. (Appian,
276
Strabo, III. iv. § 2.
277
Polybius, XXXIV.,
278
The medimnus of barley (52 litres) sold for one drachma (97 centimes); the medimnus of wheat, 9 oboli (about 1 franc 45 centimes). (The medium value of 52 litres in France is 10 francs.) A metretes of wine (39 litres) was worth one drachma (97 centimes); a hare, one obolus (16 centimes); a goat, one obolus (16 centimes); a lamb, from 3 to 4 oboli (50 to 60 centimes); a pig of a hundred pounds weight, 5 drachmas (4 francs 85 centimes); a sheep, 2 drachmas (1 franc 95 centimes); an ox for drawing, 10 drachmas (9 francs 70 centimes); a calf, 5 drachmas (4 francs 85 centimes); a
279
Strabo, III. ii. § 1.
280
Appian,
281
Titus Livius, XXII. 20.
282
Strabo, IV. i. § 11; ii. § 14; iii. § 3.
283
See what M. Amedée Thierry says,
284
Pliny, XXI. 31.
285
Diodorus Siculus, V. 26. – Athenæus, IV. xxxvi. 94.
286
Demosthenes,
287
Strabo, IV. vi. § 2, 3.
288
Diodorus Siculus, V. xxxix.
289
See Titus Livius, XXXII. to XLII.
290
See Strabo, V. i. § 10, 11.
291
Strabo, V. i. § 12.
292
Gold was originally very abundant in Gaul; but the mines whence it was extracted, and the rivers which carried it, must have been soon exhausted, for the quality of the Gaulish gold coins becomes more and more abased as the date of their fabrication approaches that of the Roman conquest.
293
Strabo, V. i. § 7. – Titus Livius, X. 2.
294
Pliny,