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When Hecataeus the historian was at Thebes, and, discoursing of his
genealogy, traced his descent to a god in the person of his sixteenth
ancestor, the priests of Jupiter did to him exactly as they afterwards
did to me, though I made no boast of my family. They led me into the
inner sanctuary, which is a spacious chamber, and showed me a
multitude of colossal statues, in wood, which they counted up, and
found to amount to the exact number they had said; the custom being for
every high priest during his lifetime to set up his statue in the
temple. As they showed me the figures and reckoned them up, they
assured me that each was the son of the one preceding him; and this
they repeated throughout the whole line, beginning with the
representation of the priest last deceased, and continuing till they
had completed the series. When Hecataeus, in giving his genealogy,
mentioned a god as his sixteenth ancestor, the priests opposed their
genealogy to his, going through this list, and refusing to allow that
any man was ever born of a god. Their colossal figures were each,
they said, a Piromis, born of a Piromis, and the number of them was
three hundred and forty-five; through the whole series Piromis
followed Piromis, and the line did not run up either to a god or a
hero. The word Piromis may be rendered "gentleman."
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