nop<i>YpiftN nvrAproz 151 



F1PEIBY2 (continued}. 



Cf. Plin. viii. 25 ; Munk. ad Anton. Lib. p. 100 ; Lob. Path. 

 p. 132. 

 nTE'PNII. Vide s.v. 





riTEPYrOTY'PANNOI- opvis noios fv 'Ivdiicfj 'AX^ai/fyxa doBels, Hesych. 



riTE'PflN' flcjos opveov, Hesych. 



Meineke, Com. Fr. iv. p. 647 (ap. Hesych.) dXX' j) rpiopxos ?} Trrepwr 77 

 arpovdias. Cf. Etym. M. 226, 37, Theognost. 36. 19. 



HTYT5. Arist. H. A. ix. 12, 615 b = u|3pis, q. v. For imryyi, MSS. 



have irtoyi, iTTOyyi, irrvyyiyi, for which Schn. reads ircovyyi; vide 

 infra s. v. <|>wu|. Cf. Schn. in Arist. vol. ii. 97, 117 ; Anton. Lib. 5 ; 

 Etym. M. 699, 10 ; Lob. Phryn. 72. 



RYTAProi, a. A sort of Eagle or Falcon; 8os aeroC, Hesych.; 

 vide infra. 



Arist. H. A. ix. 32, 6l8 b yevos dcrwv' Kara TCI TreSt'a KOI TCI 0X0-77 KOI TTfpt 

 Tas TroXets 1 yiverat' eviot 8e KaXoixri vefipocpovov avrov' Trtrfrai de KCU fls TCI 

 opr) KOI els TTJV v\r]v 810. TO Qdpaos. Cf. Plin. x. (1)3 secundi generis 

 Pygargus, in oppidis mansitat et in campis, albicante cauda. Arist. 



H. A. Vi. 6, 563 b X a ^ e 7TO y Ktpi r TfKVa. 



Cf. Schol. Lye. 91. Also Etym. M. 695, 50 nvyapyos' flSos aerou* 

 2o(poK\r]s (fr. 932 a) cVi roi) SciXoi), d-rro TTJS \CVK^S nvyrjs, cocrTrfp evavTius 

 [j,fXaiJi7rvyr]s drro TTJS icr^vpds. 



Note Circus cyaneus, L. ( > =Falco pygargus, L.), the Hen-harrier 

 or Ring-tail, is now called rrvyapyos in the Cyclades (Erhard, op. cit. 

 p. 47). To it much of the description given is applicable, but certainly 

 not the epithet vfftpo(p6i>os. Sundevall imagines the Golden Eagle to 

 be meant, Gloger and others the White-tailed Eagle or Erne, Haliaetus 

 albidlla (L.), to which latter the description in Aesch. Ag. 1156 e|orrti/ 

 dpyias, seems to apply : but these are surely excluded by the evidence 

 as to size (cf. Pliny, 1. c.), frequency, and affection for cities and plains. 

 I incline to identify the bird with the Short-toed Eagle, Circaetus 

 gallicus, which in French, as perhaps also here, seems to share its 

 popular name (Jean-le-Blanc) with C. cyaneits. But the name was 

 originally mystical (cf. s.v. jJieXdjjnruYos), however it may in later times 

 have been specifically applied to a particular bird. 



HYTAProi, |3. An undetermined bird. 



Arist. H. A. viii. 3, 593 b. A water-bird, mentioned with o-^om'Xo? 

 and KiyK\os, about the size of a thrush ; TO ovpalov KMI : frequents rivers 

 and streams. 



The size agrees with Sundevall's suggestion of a Sandpiper. Aubert 



