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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2013
Professor Wace's brilliant services to archaeology have been diffused over so wide a field that it is not difficult to cite some notable work of his in connexion with almost anything that one may oneself offer to his Festschrift. As I wish to write of a famous fifth-century bronze statue, I may gratefully remember his illuminating article on the Chatsworth head, printed in JHS LVIII (1938), 90–95.
1 Ms. graecus 479, f. 33r; cf. Boudreaux, P., Oppien d' Apameée, La Chasse (Paris, 1908), 25Google Scholar
2 Manuel d' Art Byzantin, II (Paris, 1926), 602–604, fig. 284; La Peinture Byzantine (Paris, 1933), 93, pl. LXXX.
5 I am indebted to the courtesy of the Marcian Librarian for procuring me this photograph.
4 II 410 ff.
5 La Peinture Byzantine, loc, cit.
6 III 368.
7 Cf. the nearly contemporary portrait of Basil II, Diehl, La Peinture Byzantine, pl. LXXXIII.
8 See, however, the Athenian coin figured by Picard, , Manuel d' Archéologie grecque, La Sculture, II (Paris, 1929), 3399 fig. 145Google Scholar where what may be the of a appear as vertical incisions below the waist.
9 For this and the following details, see JHS LXVII (1949), 31–33.
10 For the shield on the ground, cf. Chamoux, F., in BCH LXVIII–LXIX (1944–1945), 232–233.Google Scholar
11 Cf. Chamoux, loc. cit., and Stevens, G. P. in Hesperia V (1936), 495.Google Scholar The column was, in fact, strack by lightning in October 1079 (Attaliota, ed. Bonn., p. 3107–19.)
12 Chamoux, op. cit., 231.