NYMPHALID£Z—JUNONIA. 
JUNONIA CUAMA. 4, 5. 
Urprrsips rufous. Both wings with the outer margin broadly brown, traversed 
by a line of brown, and bordered inwardly by a line of the same colour: both wings 
with a band of small black spots, two of which, near the apex of the anterior wing, 
have white centres. Anterior wing with a spot in the cell, a spot at the end of the 
cell, a transverse broken band (from margin to margin) of irregular spots, and a large 
spot near the apex, all dark brown. Posterior wing with a large black spot on the 
costal margin, and two smaller spots below it. 
UnprrsipE rufous and lilac brown. Both wings with several indistinct spots 
near the base: both crossed near the middle by an indistinct band of paler colour : 
both with a band of indistinct rufous spots; posterior wing with a submarginal band 
of indistinct spots. 
Expan. 2445 inch. Hab. Zambesi. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
JUNONIA ARTAXIA. 6. 
Uprersipr. Anterior wing grey blue: the centre blue black: the margin 
rufous brown: the cell crossed by five bands of black: two minute white spots near 
the apex, and three bands of brown near the outer margin. Posterior wing rufous 
brown with a crimson ocellus, with pupil of lilac and yellow iris bordered with black 
and two indistinct submarginal bands of brown. 
UnpersipE grey brown. Anterior wing crossed before the middle by three 
rufous brown bands: beyond the middle by a curved band of purple brown: marked 
at the apex by three minute black spots, and below them, near the outer margin, by 
several rufous and brown spots. Posterior wing crossed at the middle from the 
costal margin to the anal angle by a linear rufous band, with its outer border broadly 
brown ; clouded near the base by some indistinct spots, and marked beyond the band 
by an indistinct blind ocellus, and some minute black spots ; and nearer the margin 
by a curved black line. 
Expan. 2485 inch. Hab. Zambesi. 
In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 
On the underside this species has a near resemblance of J. Iphita. 
The butterflies represented in the accompanying plate were collected by Mr. John Dickinson, of 
Jarrow, in the county of Durham, who was appointed surgeon to the Universities’ Mission to Central 
Africa, under Bishop Mackenzie, but unfortunately did not live to return to England. The collections 
in the various branches of Natural History which have reached his relations, show the zeal with which 
he must have prosecuted the pursuit. To the generosity of his relations I owe the pleasure of 
publishing these new species, and of adding them and others of equal interest to my collection. 
