88 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OIT THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Perga in Faniphylia. — Gallienus and Salonina. Bronze. 

 Reverse, Agonistic table and urn inscribed with the name of 

 a local festival, ACVAIA DVeiA. Beneath the table 1E[PA]. 



Ferga in Pamjyhylia.—Tsicitus. Bronze. Of this emperor, 

 who reigned only 200 days (a.d. 275-6) after the death of 

 Aurelian, the Greek coins are of the greatest rarity. 

 Alexandria in Egypt and Perga in Pamphylia are the only 

 towns of which coins of Tacitus are known. The newly- 

 acquired specimen bears the type of Zeus seated, holding a 

 prize urn, and the inscription TAKI[TJIOC MHTPOnOAITIOC 

 n6PrAION, showing that Games were instituted by the 

 Emperor Tacitus at this city, the Metropolis of Pamphylia. 



Codrula in Pisidia. — Julia Domna. Bronze of the greatest 

 rarity. The only two hitherto known coins of Codrula are 

 in the collection of the late M. Waddington, concerning which 

 he says {Melanges I. 83) that they are the only evidence for 

 the orthography of the name of a city which appears under 

 various blundered appellations in the Ecclesiastical Notices, 

 in the Acts of the Council of Chalcedon, and in Hecataeus of 

 Miletus as cited by Stephanus Byzantinus. 



Vevhe or Verbis in Pisidia. — Philip Jun. Bronze. Of 

 this town, the site of which has only recently been ascer- 

 tained at about three miles south-east of Andeda, no coins 

 were previously known of so late a date as Philip II, a.d. 

 244-249. 



Anazarhus in Cilicia. — ^Elagabalus and Paula. Bronze. 

 Reverse, recumbent figure of the god of the River Pyramos, on 

 the banks of which Anazarbus stood. 



Cennatis in Cilicia. — Philip Jun. Bronze, unique. 

 Reverse, Tyche standing before the personified city: inscribed 

 KENNATilN. 



Mo2')sus in Cilicia.— Claudius. Bronze, finely preserved, 

 Date 110 (= A.D. 42; according to the era of the city. 



Trijjolis in Phoenicia. — Julia Domna. Bronze. Reverse, 

 AlOC AnOV, Two temples and date FK^ (= 523 = a.d. 211). 



Laodicea ad Mare in Syria. — Augustus. Silver. Tetra- 

 drachm ; from the Northwick Collection. Presented by the 

 late H. Montagu, Esq., f.s.a. 



2. Roman Series : — 



Thirty-nine denarii of Roman emperors from Trajan to 

 Commodus, selected from a hoard recently discovered at 

 Silchester. Presented by H. M. Treasury. 



A denarius 



