founded, at the mouth of the Rhone, a colony called
Rhodanusia or Rhoda, with the same name as that which
they had already founded on the north-east coast of
Spain, and which is nowadays the town of Rosas, in
Catalonia. But the importance of the Rhodians
on the southern coast of Gaul was short-lived.
It had already sunk very low in the year 600 B.C.,
when Euxenes, a Greek trader, coming from Phocea,
an Ionian town of Asia Minor, to seek his fortune,
landed from a bay eastward of the Rhone. The
Segobrigians, a tribe of the Gallic race, were in
occupation of the neighboring country. Nann,
their chief, gave the strangers kindly welcome, and
took them home with him to a great feast which he
was giving for his daughter’s marriage, who was
called Gyptis, according to some, and Petta, according
to other historians. A custom which exists still
in several cantons of the Basque country, and even
at the centre of France in Morvan, a mountainous district
of the department of the Nievre, would that the maiden
should appear only at the end of the banquet, and
holding in her hand a filled wine-cup, and that the
guest to whom she should present it should become the
husband of her choice. By accident, or quite
another cause, say the ancient legends, Gyptis stopped
opposite Euxenes, and handed him the cup. Great
was the surprise, and, probably, anger amongst the
Gauls who were present. But Nann, believing
he recognized a commandment from his gods, accepted
the Phocean as his son-in-law, and gave him as dowry
the bay where he had landed, with some cantons of
the territory around. Euxenes, in gratitude,
gave his wife the Greek name of Aristoxena (that is,
“the best of hostesses"), sent away his ship
to Phocea for colonists, and, whilst waiting for them,
laid in the centre of the bay, on a peninsula hollowed
out harbor-wise, towards the south, the foundations
of a town, which he called Massilia—thence
Marseilles.
[Illustration: Gyptis presenting the Goblet to
Euxenes——17]
Scarcely a year had elapsed when Euxenes’ ship
arrived from Phocea, and with it several galleys,
bringing colonists full of hope, and laden with provisions,
utensils, arms, seeds, vine-cuttings, and olive-cuttings,
and, moreover, a statue of Diana, which the colonists
had gone to fetch from the celebrated temple of that
goddess at Ephesus, and which her priestess, Aristarche,
accompanied to its new country.
The activity and prosperity of Marseilles, both within
and without, were rapidly developed. She carried
her commerce wherever the Phoenicians and the Rhodians
had marked out a road; she repaired their forts; she
took to herself their establishments; and she placed
on her medals, to signify dominion, the rose, the
emblem of Rhodes, beside the lion of Marseilles.
But Nann, the Gallic chieftain, who had protected her
infancy, died; and his son, Conran, shared the jealousy
felt by the Segobrigians and the neighboring peoplets
towards the new corners. He promised and really