258 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
of uniform size, there being also a spot present between the costal and subcostal ; 
the underside of these latter specimens have the discal band and lower subapical 
spot clouded with ochreous-yellow. 
Of our illustrations of H. Agrarius, on Plate 185, figs. 2 and 2a are from the 
type specimens of the male and female in Colonel Swinhoe’s Collection. 
EULEPIS ARJA (Plate 186, figs. 1, la, gd, ?). 
Charaxes Arja, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep. iil. p. 438 (1867). Butler, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1870, 
p. 119. de Nicéville, Butt. of India, etc. i. p. 278 (1886). 
Imaco.—Male. Upperside purpurescent bluish-black. Both wings with the 
discal band olivescent-white. Forewing more obtuse at the apex, with the band 
broader at its anterior end and of more equal width than in H. Athamas ; the lower 
subapical spot more ovate, the other minute or absent. Hindwing with the discal 
band also broader and less sharply defined than in EL. Athamas, its outer edge 
posteriorly blue speckled, and the submarginal white spots somewhat larger, lunular, 
and very prominent. Underside similarly marked to H. Athamas. 
Female. Upperside with the discal band olivescent-white, more uniformly 
broader than in #. Athamas, the lower subapical spot larger, the upper very small. 
Hindwing with the discal band also broader, and the submarginal white lunulate 
spots very prominent. Underside as in the male. 
Expanse, ¢ 2,8, to 3,4, % 3;% to 3;% inches. 
Hasitat.—Eastern Himalayas; Assam; Burma. 
Distrisution.—Confined to the north-eastern portion of India and Burma. 
Mr. de Nicéville (Butt. Ind. II. 278) records it from ‘ Sikkim (where it is less 
common than H. Athamas), Sylhet, Jorehat, Sibsagar, Chittagong, and Upper 
Tenasserim.” We have verified specimens with Felder’s type, from the following 
localities, namely, Sikkim, taken in March and October by Mr. Otto Moller, now in 
Mr. W. Rothschild’s collection; Buxa, Bhotan, taken by Mr. G. C. Dudgeon; 
Khasia Hills, in Colonel C. Swinhoe’s and my own collection; Shillong, Assam, 
Lushai Hills, and Karen Hills, in Mr. P. Crowley’s collection; Tilin Yaw, Burma, 
taken by Lieutenant E. Y. Watson in November and December (J. Bombay, N. H. 8. 
1891, 42) ; Toungoo, Rangoon, in May, and Malawoon, Tenasserim, taken by Signor 
Leonardo Fea in August, im our own collection. Dr. N. Manders (Tr. Ent. Soc. 
1890, 526) says it is “ quite as common as H, Athamas in the Shan States, and is 
found in the same localities.” 
EH. Arja (Variety) Plate 186, fig. 1, b, c. 
Male and female. Upperside differs from typical Arja in the forewing being 
comparatively more triangular ; both wings, for their size, have a somewhat broader 
