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