90 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Hamaxitus in Troas. — A rare bronze coin of the fourth 

 century B.C. Reverse, Apollo Smintheus. This coin corrects 

 Historia Numorum, p. 452, where the figure is described as 

 Athena Ilias. 



Mytilene in Leshos. — A bronze coin of Imperial times with, 

 the head of a bearded hero on the obverse, and a figure of 

 Zeus Boulaios on the reverse. 



Philadelphia and Daldis in Lydia. — Caracalla. An. 

 alliance coin struck under the Archonship of Pollianus. 

 Reverse, Agonistic prize urn on a table. 



Sardes in Lydia. — An autonomous coin struck after B.C. 133^ 

 with the Magistrate's name TTOAEMAIOZ KEPAZEHZ. 

 Also an Imperial coin of Julia Domna, reverse, €171. F. KA 

 MI0POY APX. A. (Gaius Claudius Mithras, 1st Archon) 

 Agonistic prize urn of the Games called " Chrysanthina." 



Ephesus and Tralles in Lydia. — Marcus Aurelius. Re- 

 verse, Artemis Ephesia and Zeus Nikephoros. There were 

 no alliance coins of Ephesus and Tralles previously in the 

 Museum Collection. 



Tralles in Lydia. — Antoninus Pius. Two coins, one with 

 Selene in car drawn by two bulls, and the other with Demeter 

 and Kore sacrificing before an altar. 



Acnionia in Phrygia. — Caracalla. Reverse, Emperor on 

 horseback approaching a mountain surmounted by two f emala 

 figures, and with a River-god at its base. {Cf. Imhoof^ 

 Mon. gr., p. 392.) 



Avioriuwi in Phrygia. — Caracalla. Reverse, Goddess 

 seated before altar and looking back at seated child (infant 

 Zeus?). 



Docimeum in Phrygia. — Caracalla. Reverse, City -goddess 

 standing beside a conical mountain, probably the hill which 

 contained the famous marble quarries known as Docimean or 

 Synnadean. {Cf. Zeit. f. Num. VI., p. 18.) 



Hierapolis in Phrygia. — Imperial times : — 

 (i.) Zeus Troios. Reverse, the god Lairbenos ; 

 (ii.) Bust of Lairbenos. Reverse, the mother-goddess 

 Kybele feeding serpent, with Telesphoros behin-d 

 her throne ; 

 (iii.) Lairbenos on horseback. 



Laodicea in Phrygia. — A Cistophorus bearing the name of 

 P LENTVLVS P. F. IMP. P. Lentulus was Proconsul of 

 Cilicia, B.C. 56- 53. The coin also bears a local magistrate's 

 name HPO<t>ANTOC HPO<l>ANTOY not included in 

 Finder's work Ueber die Cistophoren. 



