136 
No. 10. No. 11. 
[No Seal. ] [No Seal.] 
Georgi Russhel Ville de 
Baronis. Ardglasse. 
Ville de 
Kilcleth. 
Dr. Kennedy Baillie, having been called upon to read the 
conclusion of his memoir on the University sculptures, com- 
menced the Archeological division of his subject by an exami- 
nation of the meanings attached by the Greeks to the terms 
"AyaAua, “Avoorac, Eixwv, and [ivaé. 
He then proceeded to details respecting the imports of the 
expressions Eikwv ypatrh, Eixwv yoamt) EvorAoc, Eixov 
yoanrn év drAote emtxpdcorc, Eikoy yoarti reAcia. 
His next step was to discuss the analogy between the 
eixkdvec EvowAo and the “ Clypei,” ‘ Clupea,” or ‘ Clypeate 
Imagines” of the Romans. 
His conclusion from the passages of Pliny, Macrobius, 
Suetonius, and other writers, in which distinct mention has 
been made of these, was, that the Greek and Roman denomi- 
nations were synonymous; and that the opinion of Professor 
Bockh, which would limit the sense of Eixévee tvomAo to 
pictorial forms, is not entitled to reception. 
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