Cáucasus, An hill, one of the highest in all Asia, situate aboue Iberia and Alania on the north part, and is a part of the mountaine Taurus: one of the partes of this hill deuiding India and Medea, stretcheth towarde the redde Sea. Philostratus.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
Caucăsus, i, m., = *kau/kasos. I.The rough Caucasian chain of mountains, in.habited by wild tribes, in Asia, between theBlack and Caspian Seas, Mel. 1, 15, 2; Plin. 6, 13, 15, 37; Cic. Tusc. 2, 10, 23: inhospitalis, Hor. C. 1, 22, 7; id. Epod. 1, 12; cf. Verg. A. 4, 366; acc. Gr. Caucason, Ov. M. 8, 798; Stat. Th. 4, 394.—Hence, B. Caucă-sĭus, a, um, adj., pertaining to Caucasus, Caucasian: montes, Mel. 1, 19, 13; 2, 4, 8: vertex, Verg. G. 2, 440: rupes, Prop. 2, 1, 69: aves, id. 2 (3), 25, 14: volucres, Verg. E. 6, 42: arbores, Prop. 1, 14, 6: Portae, a narrow pass between the Caucasus and the mare Hyrcanum, Plin. 6, 11, 12, 30.—II.A name of a horse, Sil. 16, 357.