( 203 ) 



1 mm. wide between B,^ and M^ where it is widest ; discal and jiostdiscal black 

 Inniform bars thin, not widened to patclics, inclnding between themselves the 

 brownish red postdiscal spots which are all of nearly the same size, spot R- — R' 

 (luly being smaller, owing to the veins being closer together ; the metallic white 

 proximal borders of these spots also the same in width ; submarginal white spots 

 fused with the white borders of the yellowish adraarginal spots, forming a more or 

 less continuous (at the veins constricted) narrow white band in which the black 

 submarginal dots are placed ; interspace between this band and the postdiscal spots 

 more or less slate-colour ; tails metallic pale blue. ' 

 Length of forewing : c? , 32 — 39 mm. 

 9 V) 



>) )) )) + ! *''' >! 



Hull. From Burma to Borneo and Sumatra. In Tring Museum 30 cjc?, 1 ? 

 from Thaunguyn Valley, Tenass., 1.5(iO feet, March 189n (Bingham); Dalgwin- 

 Papnn, December 1891 (Bingham); Downat Range, August 12th, 1893 (Bingham), 

 March 1895 (Hauxwell); Theiping, Pcrak; Selesseh, Deli, May, August (Dr. Martin); 

 Gayoe country, January, May (Dr. Martin) ; Battack Mts., July (Dr. Martin) ; 

 Setinjak, W. Sumatra, June (Ericsson) ; Mt. Mulu, Borneo (Hose); Peugeron, 

 S.E. Borneo. 



Dr. Martin, in the list of the Butterflies of Sumatra (I.e.), refers to this species 

 as being mostly captured by the Gayoe collectors in the forests west of Langkat, 

 leading to their country ; while Dr. liagen (I.e.) says that he found it more often on 

 the plains than E. hebe and moori, especially on the Ramunia Estate at Serdong, 

 close to the sea, but received also many examples from the Karo and Gayoe 

 countries. 



(I. Forewing below without kidney-shaped postdisco-submarginal markings. 



e'. Brown band on basal luilf (if hindwing below at least 2 mm. distant from 

 base of praecostal veinlet. 

 c". White submarginal spots of upperside of forewing present. 



cl Yellow-brown median band of forewing below curving distad 

 behind W. 



14. Eulepis eudamippus (Nov. Zool. V. t. VIII. f 1 to 6). 



Charaxcs eudamippus Doubleday, Ann. Sue. Ent. Fraiice (2). I. p. 218. t. 8. (J (1841!) (Silhet). 



(?. Body above olivaceous black, with the usual white dots on head and 

 pronotum, or more greyish olive, or head, pronotum and front part of mesonotum 

 pale olive, and the rest of upperside yellowish white. 



Underside : palpi, breast and legs white, front side of anterior tiliia and of four 

 posterior femora, and stripes on breast underneath the femora, black ; abdomen 

 black, marked white, or white with black markings, or white with black spots at 

 base, seldom quite black. 



Wi/i(/s, upperside: black, with a yellowish white band which occupies sometimes 



the greater part of the wings. Forewing : discal band either extending to base 



and occupying also the cell, or the band more restricted, the base of the wing being 

 black; band entire from R' to internal margin, but separated into three spots from 

 R' to SC''; spot R-'— R^ close to cell, separated from partition R'' — M' of band by a 

 black streak of even width (Ij mm.) which extends along W and D' and corresponds 

 to the discal branch of the yellowish tawny olive median band of the underside ; on 



