264 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
the costa, a streak at end of the cell, and the apical border broadly decreasing to the 
posterior angle, purpurescent-black ; the outer border traversed by a submarginal 
row of pale olivescent-yellow decreasing spots. Hindwing with a submarginal 
narrow band composed of bluish-white lunular spots, each surrounded by black and 
inwardly-traversed by a slender bluish-white line; the extreme marginal edge, 
including the two slender tails and the ends of the veins, black, diffused inwardly 
with bluish-grey. Body dark purpurescent-brown; palpi brown above, white 
beneath ; vertex and collar white-spotted ; forelegs brown, fore tarsus white; middle 
and hind femora brown above, white beneath, tibiz and tarsi white ; antenne black ; 
eyes reddish. Underside. Both wings pearly-white ; the costa of forewing to near 
the tip, a narrow recurved subbasal band, an excurved submarginal band, and an 
extreme marginal band olivescent brownish-ochreous, brightest on the hindwing ; 
the subbasal band anteriorly-edged with a slender black broken line, the sub- 
marginal band outwardly edged on the forewing by a broken black lunular line, and 
on the hindwing traversed by a row of narrow black-edged lunules, followed by an 
outer row of small black spots. 
Expanse, 34 to 3$ inches. 
Hasirat.—Western and Eastern Himalayas ; Assam. 
Distrisution.—In Butt. Ind. 11.273 Mr. de Niceville records ‘‘ two specimens 
taken in Kulu by Mr. A. Graham Young.” The late General G. Ramsay took it in 
Nepal. According to Mr. de Nicéville this species is ‘‘ apparently single-brooded, 
and in Sikkim occurs at low elevations only in April and May. I have only seen 
one female of this species, taken by Mr. G. C. Dudgeon in Bhotan on 2nd May, 
1892” (Sikkim Gazetteer, 1894, 147). It also occurs in Assam, Cachar, Sylhet, and 
Upper Tenasserim. Mr. Tucker, of the Rangoon Police, took it at Tavoy in 
December, and Capt. Bingham in Thoungyeen Vailey in February. It is also found 
in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo. 
MURWAREDA EUDAMIPPUS (Plate 189, figs. 2, 2a ¢). 
Charaxes Eudamippus, Doubleday, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, 1848, p. 218, pl. 8. Butler, Proe. Zool. 
Soc., 1865, p. 635. de Nicéville, Butt. of India, ete.,ii. p. 273 1886). 
Ivaco.—Male and female. Upperside. Both wings pale olivescent-yellow. 
Forewing with the costa including more or less the upper-half of the cell, and a broad 
bar at its end, the apex widely and the outer margin broadly, deep purpurescent- 
black ; also a short continuous black streak below the base of the upper median 
veinlet enclosing a quadrate pale yellow spot beyond the cell; following which are 
two superposed pale yellow subquadrate spots, a transverse submarginal series of 
spots, the three upper of which are obconical and the four lower decreasingly 
