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Footnotes

[101]

See Strabo, lib. x.

[102]

He confirmed the liberty of the city of Amisus, an Athenian colony which had enjoyed a popular government, even under the kings of Persia. Lucullus having taken Sinone and Amisus, restored them to their liberty, and recalled the inhabitants, who had fled on board their ships.

[103]

See what Appian writes concerning the Phanagoreans, the Amisians, and the Synopians, in his treatise Of the War against Mithridates.

[104]

See Appian, in regard to the immense treasures which Mithridates employed in his wars, those which he had buried, those which he frequently lost by the treachery of his own people, and those which were found after his death.

[105]

See Appian Of the War against Mithridates.

[106]

Ibid.

[107]

He lost at one time 170,000 men, yet he soon recruited his armies.

[108]

In the "Considerations on the Causes of the Rise and Declension of the Roman Grandeur."