of the Greco-Roman Era in certain ancient Sites of Asia Minor. — 83 
destination for the night, Yeni-shéhir, the residence of the Agha of the district, 
to whom the Tchiftlik above-mentioned belongs. 
“We are now in the valley of the Yeni-tchai, the river familiar to the 
readers of Pliny under the various denominations of Orsinus, Mossinus, or Mosy- 
nus, and the ruins which overspread the hill-slopes we are passing are those of 
Antiocheia ad Meandrum. ‘The Turkish village lies at some distance from it, 
but is generally marked as its representative, and deservedly so, if the exceed- 
ingly lovely and picturesque situation which it occupies on one of the smaller 
eminences which command the valley be taken into account; but the sites are 
not the same.” 
Ibid. page 47, line 6. 
On a more attentive consideration of this inscription (which forms one of the 
series I myself collected, and has been published by Mr. Arundell), I have seen 
reason to retract the opinion that it contains any mention of an Asiarch, either 
male or female. It is simply an enumeration of the hereditary priests and priest- 
esses of the twelve gods for two successive priesthoods. 
Ibid. page 50, line 15. 
This may have been a sepulchral inscription. One of the tituli of this class 
which I find amongst my collection from Corycus of Cilicia, is thus worded, 
romos KaXaporiov. So also roros Aovuka, in the Christian inscription copied 
at Aphrodisias by Mr. (now Sir Charles) Fellows, with which compare the third 
. , U * 
preceding, 7 aopos Te Kal 6 To7os eligi kK. T. X. 
Ibid. page 51, line 14. 
On reconsidering the arrangement of these tituli in my diary, and the parts 
which had been obscured, I am disposed to adopt some alterations in this version. 
A good deal of confusion arose from their lying so contiguous to each other,—I 
believe on the same marble ; the part in honour of Newra Ammia towards the 
left, that which related to her husband to the right, and almost in juxtaposition. 
A very little attention, however, soon rectified this oversight, and produced me 
the titulus appropriate to each case. 
* Lycia, Append. A, p. 360, nn. 67. 70. 
