Samos, a fertile island in the Ægean Sea, about 30 m. long and 8 wide, separated from the coast of Ionia, three-quarters of a mile wide; had an extensive trade with Egypt and Crete; came through various fortunes under the chief Powers of ancient and mediæval Europe till it became subject to Turkey; had a capital of the same name, which in the fifth century B.C. was one of the finest cities in the world.
Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)
Samoa * SamothraceLinks here from Chalmers
Agatharchides
Agatharcus
Agatho
Alcibiades
Anacreon
Aristarchus [No. 3]
Conon
Epicurus
Herodotus
Homer
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