On new Species of Rhopalocera from Burma. 111 
IX.—On new Species of Rhopalocera from Toungoo, Burma, 
and the Battak Mountains in Sumatra. By Major J. M. 
FAWCETT. 
Ragadia simplex, sp. n. 
Hab. Battak Mountains, Sumatra: June 1896. 
Description.—Male. Upperside pale fuliginous brown, 
crossed by two darker fuscous bands running parallel to one 
another from the costa of the fore wing to the inner margin 
of the hind wing, the outer being much broadened on the 
hind wing. There is also a shorter band proximal to the 
body, which, starting parallel to the others on the fore wing 
costa, ends at the origin of the submedian of the fore wing. 
From the apex of the fore wing to the inner angle of the 
hind wing runs a submarginal row of smal! indistinct fuscous 
spots, one in each interspace. The wing-margins are nar- 
rowly fuscous, the colour being bounded by a narrow sub- 
marginal band looped on the fore wing and on the hind wing 
parallel to the margin. 
Underside similar in markings to the upper, but the 
ground-colour pale buff and the row of spots silver instead of 
fuscous. 
The antenne, head, thorax, abdomen, and legs like those of 
f. crisia, Hiibner, from which this species differs in its 
generally pale ground-colour, and in the ocellate band of 
crisia being reduced to mere pupils of silver below and fuscous 
above. 
Cynthia circe, sp. n. 
Hab. Toungoo, Burma (March to June); Beeling, Te- 
nasserim. 
Description.—The species is allied to C. erota, Fabr., and 
pura, Swinhoe, from Cherra Punji. The male has exactly 
the colour of that sex of pura, Swinhoe, and only differs in 
the greater irregularity of the dark line crossing the wings 
trom the middle of the costa of the fore wings to the anal 
angle of the hind wings and in the slightly more produced 
tail at the third median vein of the hind wings. The dark 
wing-markings tend to be a little more distinct. 
Female. Upperside differs from that sex of C. erota in the 
white band of both wings being much broader, extending 
decreasingly in breadth to the anal angle of the hind wing, 
and the submarginal area beyond the white band being golden 
