BOOK XXXIV. XIX. 84-87 



emperor Vespasian in the Temple of Peace and his a.d. 76. 

 othor public buildings ; they had been looted by 

 Nero, who conveyed them all to Rome and arranged 

 them in the sitting-rooms of his Golden Mansion. 



Besides these, artists on the same level of merit 

 but of no outstanding excellence in any of their 

 works are : Ariston, who often also practised 

 chasing silver, Callides, Ctesias, Cantharus of Sicyon, 

 Dionysius, Diodorus the pupil of Critias, Deliades, 

 Euphorion, Eunicus and Hecataeus the silver chasers, 

 Lesbocles, Prodorus, Pythodicus, Polygnotus, who 

 was also one of the most famous among painters, 

 similarly Stratonicus among chasers, and Critias's 

 pupil Scymnus. 



I will now run through the artists who have 

 made works of the same class, such as Apollo- 

 dorus, Androbulus and Asclepiodorus, Aleuas, who 

 have done philosophers, and Apellas also women 

 donning their ornaments, and Antignotus also 

 Man using a Body-scraper and the Men " that 

 Slew the Tyrant, above-mentioned, Antimachus, 

 Athenodorus who made splendid figures of women, 

 Aristodemus who also did Wrestlers, and Chariot 

 and Pair with Driver, figures of philosophers, of old 

 women, and King Seleucus ; Aristodemus's Man 

 holding Spear is also popular. There were two 

 artists named Cephisodotus ; the Hermes Nursing 

 Eather Liber or Dionysos when an Infant belongs to 

 the elder, who also did a Man Haranguing \viih 

 Hand Uplifted — whom it represents is uncertain. 

 The later Cephisodotus did philosophers. Colotes 

 who had co-operated with Pheidias in the Olympian §§ 19, 54. 

 Zeus made statues of philosophers, as also did Cleon 



" Harmodius and Aristogeiton. See §§ 70, 72. 



191 



