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Περσέων ... κομητέων, ‘as may be seen in the sculptures of Persepolis,’ &c.; hence βαθυχαιτήεις Μῆδος, Aesch. ap. Athen. 627 a.

ἱρόν: the whole precinct with all its contents (iv. 108. 2). The actual temple (νηός) and the oracle seem to have occupied different parts of it (Strabo 634).

Διδύμοισι. The word is borrowed from the oracle. Elsewhere (i. 46. 2, 157 f.) H. calls it Branchidae. H. clearly ascribes the ruin of this and other Greek temples in Asia (25, 32) to Darius. Hence, unless we suppose the work was done twice over, Strabo (634) can hardly be right in attributing the sack of Branchidae and the others, except that of Ephesus, to Xerxes in 479 B. C. Strabo's account seems to depend on the story that the Branchidae themselves betrayed the temple and its treasures, a crime for which their descendants in Sogdiana were said to have been punished by Alexander (Strabo 518; Plut. Mor. 557 B; Q. Curtius, vii. 23). The story may come from Callisthenes (Strabo 814), but is discredited by the silence of Arrian, though accepted by Grote, xii. 25.

πολλάκις: explicitly twice, i. 92. 2; v. 36. 3; but cf. also i. 46. 2, 157 f.; ii. 159. 3.

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