Page:Travels & discoveries in the Levant (1865) Vol. 1.djvu/412

358 pp. 101-20; Rev. H. O. Coxe, Report to H.M.'s Government on Greek MSS. in Levant, London, 1588.

$99$ Ross, ii. p. 179.

$100$ Sandys, Travels, London, 161.5, p. 89.

$101$ Ross, ii. pp. 136, 137.

$102$ On these coins, see Waddington, Revue Numismatique, Paris, 1856, p. 61. They were probably struck at Miletus.

$103$ The connection of Calymna with lassos is shown by an inscription, Bockh, C. I. No. 2671.

$104$ On this title see the authorities cited, K. F. Hermann, Lehrbuch d. Gottesdienstl. Alterthümer, § 35, n. 17.

$105$ See the remarks on this type of Venus, Smith & Porcher, Discoveries at Cyrene, London, 1864, p. 96.

$106$ See my History of the Budrum Expedition, pp. 590-1 ; Waddington, in Revue Numismatique, 1856, pp. 53-60.

$107$ For a description and engravings of this tholos, see Ross, Archäologische Aufsätze, pt. ii. pp. 389-93, pi. v.; Archäologische Zeitung, 1850, jap. 241-44; Reisen, iii. 131, iv. p. 17.

$108$ Theocr. Id. vii. 6. See Scholiast on this passage.

$109$ Abeken, Mittelitalien, pp. 190-97. Bunsen, Beschreibung Roms, iii. 1, p. 259, et seq. E. Braun, RuLnen und Mus. Roms, p. 26. Cf Canina, Descr. di Tusc. pi. xiv. for a similar building at Tusculum.

$110$ See the reference cited ante, note 56. The subsequent exploration of the Necropolis near Kalavarda by Messrs. Biliotti and Salzmann, and the identification of this site with Kamii-os, will be noticed in the 2nd volume of this work.

$111$ Ross, Inscript. Ined. iii. No. 277.

$112$ Transact. Royal Soc. Lit. 2nd series, iii. p. 1.

$113$ Engraved, Berg, Rhodus, ii. p. 109. This relief has been since removed to the Pasha's konak at Rhodes, where I saw it in 1863.

$114$ Ross, Inscript. Ined. iii. No. 309.

$115$ Ibid, ii No. 175.

$116$ Ibid. No. 311. Plutarch, Quæst. Gr. 58.

$117$ Now in the British Museum.

$118$ Millingen, Ancient Unedited Monuments, pi. vii.

$119$ Ross, Inscript. Ined. iii. No. 303.

$120$ Walpole, Memoirs relating to Turkey, p. 565.

$121$ Rhodes was celebrated in antiquity as the island of serpents, and it is certain that very large snakes have been seen there by