Pausanias Analysis
Chapter 10.32
Chapter 10.32
- 10.32.1: Delphi: theater, Cnidian Dionysus statue, and Herodes' Pentelic-marble stadium
- 10.32.2: The Corycian Cave on Mount Parnassus.
- 10.32.3: Steunos cave, sanctuary of the Mother Goddess.
- 10.32.4: Themisonion residents hid in a cave revealed by Heracles, Apollo, and Hermes.
- 10.32.5: Cave of the gods with statues of Heracles, Hermes, and Apollo and inner springs
- 10.32.6: Apollo's cave at Aulai with an ancient statue and consecrated men's remarkable feats.
- 10.32.7: Corycian Cave on Parnassus, sacred to the Corycian Nymphs and Pan.
- 10.32.8: Tithorea's distance from Delphi and its alternate names.
- 10.32.9: Tithorea (formerly Neon) and its name derived from a nymph.
- 10.32.10: Tithorea: a theater, old agora, Athena's grove/temple/statue, and the tombs of Antiope and Phocus
- 10.32.11: The river Cachales supplying the town's drinking water.
- 10.32.12: The temple of Asclepius Archagetas near Tithorea.
- 10.32.13: The holy shrine of Isis near Tithorea, entry granted only to those summoned by dreams.
- 10.32.14: Isis festivals and secret purification rites at Tithorea
- 10.32.15: Three-day festival with final day as an open market for slaves and goods.
- 10.32.16: Midday sacrifices with animals wrapped in linen in the Egyptian manner.
- 10.32.17: A profane man enters Tithorea's sanctuary and dies after seeing phantoms.
- 10.32.18: Festival of Isis mourning Osiris, linked to the Nile's rise
- 10.32.19: Tithorea's olive oil prized for its appearance and fragrance despite low yield.