Had Don Juan de Castro been acquainted with the eastern
gulf at the head of the Red Sea, called the Bahr-akkaba, he would have
more readily chosen Ayla for the seat of Ailan, and the dock-yard of
the navy of Solomon, being at the inwardest part of the Red Sea, and
the port nearest to Gaza. Besides, the portion of the text marked with
inverted commas, seems a quotation by Don Juan from Strabo, which
distinctly indicates the eastern or Elanitic Gulf, and points to Ayla
as the seat of Elana and Ailan, and distinctly marks the other or
western gulf, now that of Suez. - E.]
"As this is a point of great moment in geography, it deserves to be
examined[316]. It is observable that Don Juan admits that both Ptolemy
and Strabo make the Red Sea terminate to the north in two large gulfs,
one towards Egypt and the other towards Arabia, at the end of which
latter they place Elana. Yet here he rejects the authority of both
geographers, alleging that both were mistaken, because Tor is situated
on a very long and straight coast. He likewise cites Ptolomy as making
the latitude of Elana 29 deg.15' N.[317] yet accounts the difference between
that position and the altitude found at Al Tor, 20 deg.10', as of no
significance here, though in former instances he had held the tables of
Ptolomy as infallible. It is still stranger that Don Juan should after
all admit of a gulf of Elana, as will be seen presently, and yet place
it at a great distance, and at the opposite side of the sea from that on
which Elana stands.
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