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SECOND GROUP: “*80-89 A. D.”’ C. Muller, Geographi Graect Minores, I, xcvi; depending on the doubtful dates given Za Hakale by Henry Salt, in his rearrangement of the Abyssinian Chronicle in 1812. seo Ae ts Be 2 Bunsen, de Azania commentatio philologica, Bonn, 1852. “*80-85 A. D.’’ Vivien de Saint Martin, Histoire de la Géographie et des déecou- vertes geographiques, 1873; also Le Nord de 1? Afrique dans P antiquite grecque et romaine. “*77-89 A. D., as shown by Miller.’’ Bunbury, History of Ancient Geography, Il, 445; London, 1883. ““About 10 years after Pliny’ s death’’ (which occurred in79 A. D.) Tozer, History of Ancient Geography, p. 274: Cambridge, 1897. “About 90 A. D.’’ (referring to Nahapana, the Nambanus of
§ 41), A.-M. Boyer, in Journal Asiatique, Paris, July-Aug., 1897, pp. 120-151. “83-84 A. D.’’ (referring to Sundara Satakarni, the Sandares of § 52). C. R. Wilson, in Journal of the Asiatic Soctety of Bengal, June, 1904.
“Between 77 and 105 A. D.’’ Vincent Smith, Ear/y History of India, p. 371, ete. “Between 80 and 89 A. D.”’ McCrindle, in /ndian Antiquary, VIII, 108-151. “About 85 A. D.” J. F. Fleet, article Epigraphy, in Imperial Gazetteer of India, new edition, II, 76.
THIRD GROUP.
The following belong to the curiosities of criticism, all being based on the ‘‘emperors’’ of § 23:
“In the 2d century A. D., later than 161, under Marcus Aure- lius and Lucius Verus. ” Dodwell, in Hudson’s Geegraphia Veteris Scriptores, pp. 85-105. Heeren, De /naia Romanis cognita, in Commentationes soctetatis regia scientiarum. Gottingen, 1793, XI, 101.