204 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History [Vol. XLIII 



EuxANTHE Hiil)ner 



(286) 1. Euxanthe trajanus (Ward) 

 Godartia trajanus Ward, 1871, Ent. Mo. Mag., VIII, p. 36. 



Euxanthe trajanus Aurivillius, 1911, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 123, PL xxix/. 



One male, Medje, September 1910. 



(287) 2. Evixanthe ansellica (Butler) 

 Godartia ansellica Butler, 1870, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, p. 525. 



Euxanthe ansellica Aurivillus, 1911, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 124, PI. xxix/, 

 by error on plate there given as eurinome. 



Four males, one taken at Bafwabaka, December 3; the others 

 captured at Medje, one in each of the months, ]\Iay, August, and Sep- 

 tember. 



(288) 3. Euxanthe crossleyi (Ward) 



Godartia crossleyi Ward, 1871, Ent. Mo. Mag., VIII, p. 36. 



Euxanthe crossleyi Aurivillius, 1911, Seitz, Gros.s-Schmelt., XIII, p. 124. 



Three males caught at Medje, July 1910. 



Charaxes (3chsenheimer 



(289) 1. Charaxes epijasius Reiche 



Charaxes epijasius Reiche, 1849, in Ferret and Galinier, Voyage en Abyssinia, 

 Entomologie, p. 469, PI. xxxii, figs. 1, 2. Aurivillius, 1911, Seitz, Gross- 

 Schmett., XIII, p. 126, PI. xxxa. 



The species is represented by two males, one taken at Faradje, and 

 simply ticketted "1911-1912," the other labelled "Niangara, Nov- 

 ember 20-25, 1910." The latter is the more perfect specimen. 



This is the first record of this species from the Belgian Congo and 

 extends the known range. It has been recorded from Senegal, Nigeria, 

 and the Togo country and eastward to Abyssinia and Unyoro. 



(290) 2. Charaxes brutus angustus Rothschild and Jordan 



Papiiio hrutus Cramer, 1779, Pap. Exot., Ill, p. 82, PI. ccxli, figs. E, F. 

 Charaxes brutus angustus Rothschild and Jordan, 1900, Nov. Zool., VII, p. 432. 

 Charaxes angustus Aurivillius, 1911, Seitz, Gross-Schmett., XIII, p. 126, PI. xxxa. 



Without exception the specimens before me belong to the form to 

 which Rothschild and Jordan have given the above name. This is also 

 true of all the specimens which I have received from Cameroon and the 

 valley of the Ogove River. It is the prevailing form in the hot, wooded 

 lands of the central Ethiopian region, and is easily distinguished from 

 typical C. brutus from Sierra Leone and adjacent parts. 



