Archæologiæ Atticæ libri septem. Seven books of the Attick antiqvities. Containing the description of the citties glory, government, division of the people, and towns within the Athenian territories. their religion, superstition, sacrifices. account of the year, a full relation of their judicatories / By Francis Rovs ... With an addition of their customs in marriages, burials, feastings, divinations, &c. in the foure last bookes. By Zachary Bogan.
- Francis Rous
- Date:
- 1658
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Archæologiæ Atticæ libri septem. Seven books of the Attick antiqvities. Containing the description of the citties glory, government, division of the people, and towns within the Athenian territories. their religion, superstition, sacrifices. account of the year, a full relation of their judicatories / By Francis Rovs ... With an addition of their customs in marriages, burials, feastings, divinations, &c. in the foure last bookes. By Zachary Bogan. Source: Wellcome Collection.
114/374 (page 132)
![= 3 i ae . = _ 133 Archaologia Attice Lib. 3. Cap. 3: foever had flain any body was compelled to fee the Coun try, or ftaying dye, were the caufe never fo juft: *Ey TIpura~ veiw Here they face on things inanimate.As ifa ftone,timber, iron,orfuch like, fall on a man,& kill him, ifthe party thac flung this benotknown , fentence was paft'on that thing f Pollux loco which flew him;and the f guacéacsacis, that were the Mafters Soap of this Court, were to fee this thing caft out of the Territo- te. s08. ries of Athens,to which & Ai(chines alludes.ta hd Evae % 783 AlSus,n) F cidvesy rh dQove 1 ayraucye tay Tipe tumeroy re d morleivn <aspoeiCouy The firft thing thar here was judged was an axe,wherewich the Prieft, whom they call Beptv@ , had: flain an Oxeon the Altar of Jupiter Poliews in the time of Ee rectheus.Ey epearfos. Inthat pat of Pireexm which isnext the Sea, is a place which they name gpeativs, from Phreutus an Heros,fome think ; not becaufe it ftoodina pit, whence Lib. ofay. & Pollux names ic éy gpedres.~Here they were judged who st having fled out of another country for unwillfall murther ets Ar. | ulm AS tnBarbyaey ad rip in deouloy, they that drove him out ftocr.g15. mot acquitting him, ifinthe/{pace of his exile ie happened that he witcingly flew another he anfwered here. The pro* ceeding was ia this fort. The Judges aflembled éy opcar]o¥in k Demoft. ib. a place feated on the Sea * abrov émrarbusvoy em Saadr ior, / Rodolphus ‘ é 4 pied edt where the guilty drawing neare in a boat or bark was to make ef Pollax in- Dis apology, yits sy kaJoutvos;not coming to land or touch- terprets it | ing it,neither cafting anchor! or moaring his bark;and if he Scalam terre were'found guilcy he underwent deferved punithment : if hr a is he were not fouhd guilty they cleared him of that fa&, not t ledce ae difcharging hiavof the former ™ ot) 4 emlaest’ wstipa eve Grecke yw iwdy¢,| know not whether I may be of chatupinion that vad oay, Others arein this, thacif he were caft in thistryall, he was m Demofthe- expofed to the cruell mercy of the wind and waves. Thefe nes. lait quoted words feem to contradi& it. The firft that ever a Didtis Cre- , . c 5 tenfis de bel. 2n{tvered here was Teucer, proving himfelfeto be innocent la Trojano,], Of the death of 4jax:¢ whom they treacheroufly circumven- 6.p.4g5. ted becaafe he defended not his father Zelamon,drove out of Salamis (yi pi t0' gyiedl | wat mutt Alven! gdinit De](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30326941_0114.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)