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ἱπποτοξόται. It is curious that no representation of a ‘horse archer’ has been found on the Scythian monuments.

οἰκήματα . . . ἐπὶ ζευγέων. The nomadic life struck all the Greeks, e. g. Aeschylus (P. V. 709-10); Hippocrates (de Aer. c. 18) describes the wagons as having four or six wheels, and as roofed with felt (πίλοισι), so as to be wind and water proof. So M. Polo, i. 52, says of the Tartars: ‘Their houses are circular, and made of wands covered with felts; these are carried with them whithersoever they go’; for pictures of the Tartar houses cf. ib. pp. 253-5. Hippocrates goes on to describe the Scyth diet as flesh, milk, and cheese. H. skilfully introduces here the main point of his account of the campaign (cf. c. 120).

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