John Selby Watson, Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus London, 1853Īmong the Macedonians, Alyattes (Alyacte) among the Lydias, Vaphre among the Egyptians, and Nebuchadnezzar (Nabushodonosor) the First among the Chaldeans. On the other side a king named Europus held the sovereignty in a district called Europa. In the region of Paeonia, which is now a portion of Macedonia, is said to have reigned Pelegonus, the father of Asteropaeus, whose name we find, in the Trojan war, among the most distinguished defenders of the city. But in process of time, when, through the ability of their princes and the exertions of their subjects, they had conquered, first of all, the neighbouring tribes, and afterwards other nations and peoples, their dominions extended to the utmost boundaries of the east. The inhabitants were called Pelasgi, the country Paeonia. As the origin of this kingdom was but humble, so its limits were at first extremely narrow. Macedonia was formerly caned Emathia, from the name of king Emathion, of whose prowess the earliest proofs are extant in those parts.
108), Europus was "a son of Macedon and Oreithyia, the daughter of Cecrops, from whom the town of Europus in Macedonia was believed to get its name." Justin's Epitome (7.1) gives us additional context: Who is king Europus? According to Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology ( s.v. According to the calculations of the Holy Scriptures, the Babylonian captivity occurred 4610 years from the beginning of the world 2369 years from the Flood 1427 years from the birth of Abraham, and in the twenty-eighth year of the reign of Tarquinius, the Roman king, and while Astyages reigned among the Medes, Europus But, correctly understood, the seventy years which end in the third or last year of Cyrus are really the years of the Jewish captivity while the period ending with the second year of Darius is in fact the time when the Jews had entirely left the country. Some reckon from the last year of King Jehoiachin (Joachim) to the last year of Cyrus. Jerome reckon from the thirteenth year of King Josiah (Josie) to the third year of King Cyrus. According to Eusebius, the seventy years of the captivity ended in the second year of Darius. But some compute the time differently, reckoning the correct time of the Babylonian captivity from the eleventh year of the reign of Zedekiah (Sedechie). Here begins the Fifth Age of the World, extending from the time when the Jews went into captivity at Babylon, and enduring to the Birth of Christ-a period of 590 years.