68 MR. Jones’s new Arrangement of Papilios. 
Preggit Urdicole—Thorax and abdomen fhort, thick, or broad; 
| under wings without a connecting nerve; antennæ 
uncinated or crooked at the extremity. 
—with upper wings pointed at the extremity, and long 
in proportion to their width. 
—upper wings lefs extended, and together with their 
under wings more rotund, with their margins entire. 
Thus far nearly agreeable to Lannzus; yet there remain a few 
that cannot (if the foregoing directions are ftriétly attended to) be 
ranked with any divifion before mentioned,; for which it is ne- 
ceffary to invent à new term, and to arrange feparately, immedi- 
ately after the Equites, as partaking more of that divifion than any 
other. I therefore call them. : 
RoMANI. 
By fo doing I take from the Equites all that have filiform antennæ, 
Their characters ftand thus: Size in general large, without an ab- 
dominal graove ; no connecting nerve; their antennz generally acu- 
minated; the veins of both upper and under wings going from 
their root to the extremity, nearly in ftraight lines. To this di- 
vifion I bring from Linnzus's Equites, Leilus, Orontes, and Patro- 
clus; and from Fabricius's Danai Feftivi—Licas, Syphax, Evalthe, 
and Cochrus, and a few others not yet defcribed. 'Thefe few re- 
marks can leave no doubt to what divifion any Papilio fhould be 
referred, ‘The connecting nerve is the moft important character 
of all. 
ANTENNE 
