20 LEPIBOPTEEA INDICA. 



Soc. Zool. 1886, p. 50. Swinhoe, Tr. Ent. Soc. 1893, p. 313. Kirby, Allen's Nat. Hist. Butt. ii. 



p. 274 (1896). 

 Papilio {Pathysa) Antiphates, Wood-Mason, Journ. As. Soc. Beng. 1886, p. 376. Elwes, ib. 1886, 



p. 437. Ferguson, Journ. Bombay N. H. Soc. 1891, p. 445. de Niceville, Sikkim Gaz. 1894, 



p. 174 ; id. Journ. As. Soc. Beng. 1895, p. 524. 

 Papilio PompiUus, Fabricius, Mant. Ins. ii. p. 8 (1787); id. Ent. Syst. iii. i. p. 25 (1793). 



Horsfield, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. Company, pi. 3, fig. 3, 3a, larva a,nA. pupa (1828). Lucas, Lep. 



Exot. p, 43, pi. 22, fig. 1 (1835). 

 Jphiclides PompiUus, Hubner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 82 (1816). 

 Podalirius Pumpilius, Swainson, Zool. Illust. ii. pi. 105 (1833). 

 Papilio Antiphaies, var. PompiUus, Distant, Ehop. Malay, p. 357, pi. 31, fig. 5, ^J (1885). Hagen, 



Berl. Ent. Zeit. 1892, p. 155, id. Iris, 1894, p. 27. Fruhstorfer, Berl. Ent. Zcit. 1902, p. 197. 

 Papilio mbulosus, Butler, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1881, p. 33, pi. 4, fig. 3 {melanoid var.). 

 Papilio Itamputi, Butler, in Forbes' Nat. Wand. Sumatra, p. 276 (1885). 

 Papilio Antiphaies Javanicus, Eimer, Artbild. Schmett. p. 136 (1888). 

 Papilio Antiphaies coniinentalis et Ceylonicus, Eimer, I.e. pp. 137, 149 (1889). 



Imago. — Male. Upperside pale olivescent yellowisli- white. Foreiving with eight 

 ti'ansverse black bands, each proceeding from the costa; the first slender and at the 

 extreme base, the second also somewhat slender and ending either at the submedian 

 ■vein or extending to the posterior margin ; the third generally ending in the lower 

 median interspace but sometimes at the submedian vein ; the fourth, fifth and sixth 

 broader and not extending beyond lower border of the cell ; the fifth being sometimes 

 short and wedge-shaped — and then not crossing the cell ; the seventh broad, tapering 

 posteriorly, and ending at the second or first median veinlet, its lower end sometimes 

 partly coalesced to the marginal band, the latter ending before or at the posterior 

 angle ; basal and apical interspaces tinted with pale olive-green, and the veins in 

 the latter black lined. Hindtoing with a marginal zigzag row of black lunules, 

 these being mostly continuous and include the length of the tail, also a broader spot 

 at anal angle ; a submarginal series of more or less defined slender black-speckled 

 lunules, the latter being sometimes obsolete anteriorly; the caudal area with a more 

 or less broad dusky-grey patch sparsely speckled with black scales ; the basal and 

 discal markings of the underside also visible, as greyish patches, by semitrans- 

 parency ; cilia alternated with white, including edge of the tail. Underside. 

 Forewing white, with transverse bands as on the upperside, the basal being black, 

 the anterior purplish-black, and their interspaces darker olivescent-green tinted. 

 lUndwing with a black variable narrow transverse basal, subbasal, and inner-discal 

 band, the two latter obliquely crossing the cell and the three ending in a short 

 cross bar in the submedian and lower median interspace, the two inner bands are 

 straight, the outer somewhat sinuous ; beyond is a discal transverse parallel row of 

 various-shaped black spots, the upper one being nari'ow and curved, the next large 

 and conical, the next four small and rounded — one of the latter being within apex 



