The ethnic i.e., the name of the tribe which corresponds to the name of the city. of Botteia “A city in Macedonia” ( Etymologicum Magnum , s.v.) is spelled with the “i”, i.e., not with the e , as is Βοττεάτης the ethnic of Βόττεα (see Etym. Magn. , l.c.), but with the i , as is Βοττιαῖοι . according to Strabo in his Seventh Book. And the city is called sc. Botteia. after Botton the Cretan. The country was called “Bottiaea” (6. 3. 6), “Bottia,” and “Bottiaeis,” and the inhabitants “Bottiaei” (6. 3. 2). See Pauly-Wissowa, s.v. Βόττια and Βοττική and Meritt, Am. Jour. Arch. , 1923 , pp. 336 ff. Amphaxion. Two parts of speech. i.e., the preposition “amphi” (“on both sides of”) and the noun “Axius” (the “Axius” River). A city. The ethnic of Amphaxion is Amphaxites. The Peneius forms the boundary between Lower Macedonia, or that part of Macedonia which is close to the sea, and Thessaly and Magnesia; the Haliacmon forms the boundary of Upper Macedonia; and the Haliacmon also, together with the Erigon and the Axius and another set of rivers, form the boundary of the Epeirotes and the Paeonians. For if, according to the Geographer, Macedonia stretches from the Thessalian Pelion and Peneius towards the interior as far as Paeonia and the Epeirote tribes, and if the Greeks had at Troy an allied force from Paeonia, it is difficult to conceive that an allied force came to the Trojans from the aforesaid more distant part of Paeonia. Of the Macedonian coastline, beginning at the recess of the Thermaean Gulf and at Thessaloniceia, there are two parts—one extending towards the south as far as Sunium and the other towards the east as far as the Thracian Chersonese, thus forming at the recess a sort of angle. Since Macedonia extends in both directions, I must begin with the part first mentioned. The first portion, then, of this part—I mean the region of Sunium—has above it Attica together with the Megarian country as far as the Crisaean Gulf; after this is that Boeotian coastline which faces Euboea, and above this coast-line lies the rest of Boeotia, extending in the direction of the west, parallel to Attica. And he sc. Strabo. says that the Egnatian Road, also, beginning at the Ionian Gulf, ends at Thessaloniceia.