OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 119 



1810. Latr., Consid. 440: specifies Paphia and Cinxia as types; but 

 Paphia, the only one of these specified by Fabricius, can- 

 not be the type, because already the type of Dryas (q.v.). 



1815. Leach, Edinb. Encycl. 717 : restricts it to the first of the Fa- 

 brician sections. 



1815. Okeri, Lehrb. i. 734: gives it the same restriction, as have all 



subsequent authors. 



1816. Dalm., Vetensk. Acad. Ilandl. xxxvii. 57, 66: I. Paphia, 



Aglaja, Adippe, Niobe, Lathonia (Latonia) ; II. Aphi- 

 rape, Selene, Euphrosyne, Amathusia, lapponica (Freja), 

 Pales, Dia, Chariclea (Carichlea), Frigga, Ino, Thore. 

 Adippe specified as type, but of course erroneously. 



1816. Htibn., Verz. 30 : Aphirape and its allies. 



1820. Oken, Lehrb. f. Schulen, 790: Aglaja only. 



1830. Curtis, Brit. Ent., pi. 290 : specifies Aglaja as type. 



1840. Westw., Gen. Syn. 88: wrongly specifies Paphia as type. 



1872. Scudd., Syst. Rev. 24: specifies Aglaja as type. 



1872. Crotch, Cist. Ent. i. 66 : again specifies Paphia as type. See 

 also Argyronome. 



118. ARGYREA.* 



1820. Billb., Enum. Ins. 77 : vanillse, Lathonia, Niobe, Adippe, 

 Aglaia (Aglaja), Paphia, Maia (Cynara), Niphe, Pha- 

 lanta [?] (Pharantha), Aphirape, Selene, Euphrosyne, 

 Pales, Gersenii, Ino, Thore, Amathusia, lapponica 

 (Freja), Frigga. 



This terra is preoccupied by Argyreus (Scop., Lep. 1777) and Ar- 

 gyria (Hubn.^Lep. 1816). 



119. ARGYREUS.* 



1777. Scop., Introd. 431 : Niphe and twenty-six others in two sec- 

 tions, the former of which is divided into five, and the latter 

 into three subsections ; but they are all brought together 

 in such a confused manner, and formed of such utterly 

 incongruous material, even to what must have been the 

 sense of the naturalists of his own day, that the genus 

 must fall into merited oblivion. Subsection c of section A 

 contains, for example, the following species among others : 

 Rumina [Papilionides], vanillae [Nymphales], and Cupido 

 [Rtirales]. 



