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 1  T-II|      Rome extends, west of the Euxine Sea:~the Basternae and the
 2 T-III|   earth,~Pontus, falsely named Euxine, still holds me.~~ Book
 3  T-IV|       who sought the left-hand Euxine shore.~But my evil fate’
 4  T-IV|       The frozen shores of the Euxine, the ‘hospitable’, Sea ~
 5  T-IV|       the sinister left of the Euxine Sea.~If Dodona or Delphi
 6   T-V|      featureless shores~of the Euxine Sea – this land beneath
 7   T-V|        Ovid’s, I come from the Euxine shore,~wearied by the sea-lanes,
 8   T-V|    trapped by the shore of the Euxine, that misnomer,~and the
 9 ExIII|     other was better known, by Euxine waters.~They say that while
10 ExIII|       this brief poem from the Euxine Sea to his ~friend (how
11 ExIII|    waste away, bravely, by the Euxine Sea.~~ Book EIII.VIII:1-
12  ExIV|       to me: ‘You’ll travel to Euxine shores,~and live in fear
13  ExIV|       its course~back from the Euxine shore towards its source,~
14  ExIV|      you’ve been posted to the Euxine Sea,~to deliver justice
15   Ind|      connecting the Black Sea (Euxine) with the Propontis (Sea
16   Ind| passage between the Black Sea (Euxine) and the Maeotic Lake (Sea
17   Ind| islands at the entrance to the Euxine Sea in the Bosporus channel,
18   Ind|         Euxinus~The Black Sea (Euxine) was called the Pontus Euxinus,
19   Ind|     XIII:1-28 The ‘hospitableEuxine.~Book TIII.XIV:1-52 The
20   Ind|      to Pontus, the Black Sea (Euxine).~Book TI.X:1-50 On the
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