21 



upperside, and nearly full row of ocellations on underside 

 of all wings. Tutt {in Utt.) says, " It seems doubtful 

 whether it is not a variety name from a single specimen." 

 An examination of the figure suggests no other species. 

 The specimen came from Hungary. 



1788. Borkhausen. — "Eur. Schmetterlinge." Vol. i. Vwi^ janira 

 in the 4th Family, Oreaden, of his 1st Horde of the 

 Nymph en. 



1790. Peter Rossi. — " Fauna Etrusca." 



1793. Fabricius. — " Entomologia Systematica emend, et auct." 

 Both these authors give precedence to janira. 



1795. Lewin. -" Insects of Great Britain." Figures of the 



" Meadow brown argus." 

 1795"? Hiibner. — " Samlung. Eur. Schmett." Several poorly 

 coloured and poorly drawn figures, and one wrongly 

 named .//n-^/»rt, subsequently corrected to fii(lora = li/cao)}. 

 He uses jiirtina and not janira. 



1796. Herbst. — ■" Natursystem." Vol. viii. Plate 202. Uses 



n-Aine JaniiKs. 



1798. De Prunner. — " Lepidoptera pedemontana." Page 17. 



JJses janira. 



1799. Ljungh. — "Insects of Nya." (" Kon. Yet. Acad. Nya 



Handl.," Vol. xx., page 147). Pap. brit/itta. Plate ii. 

 Doubtful as this species. Put among the Danai candidi, 

 i.e., Pierids, but has "four feet," hence a Satyrid. 

 Possibly a white extreme aberration. 



1800. Esper.— "Die Schmett. in Abbild." Plate 113. Figures a 



small Satyrid which he calls P. janirnla. Kirby calls it a 

 var. oi janira. Tutt {in lit.) suggests li/raon. 



1801. Schrank. — "Fauna Boica." Vol. ii., Pt. I, Describes 



Maniola lemur. Saj's that the male is jnrtina and the 

 female janira. He changed the sexes, and both the 

 generic and specific names. Page 175. 



1801. Donovan. — "British Insects." Vol. ix. Plate 320. Gives 



three figures oi jnrtina. 



1802. Haworth. — " Prodromus Lepidopterorum Britannicorum." 



Places j/n-f/;irt in his oth genus of yijuiphalis, the (renxnati. 



1803. Haworth. — " Lepidoptera Britannica." Vol. i. 0,ur 



Meadow-brown called jnrtina. He is sure of the sexes as 



he has observed the two in cup. 

 1804? Hubner. — " Eur. Schmetterlinge." Vol. i. Figures and 



describes in Text /'. hispulla from Portugal, as a form of 



janira. He has now adopted the Dame janira in place of 



the jnrtina of his previous work. Figs. 593-6. 

 1805. Latreille.— " Hist. Nat. Crust, et Ins." (Buftbn's Nat. Hist.) 



Vlsbces janira in the third section of the genus Xi/mpJialis, 



the Sati/ri. 

 1807"? Esper (or Charpentier). — "Die Schmetterlinge." Vol. ii. 



Discusses P. Idapulla as " an essentially different species." 



