84 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Stratonicea ad Ca'icum, in Lydia. — An extremely rare 

 Cistophorus struck in tlie name of King Eumenes II., of 

 Pergamum in B.C. 180. From the Bunhury Collection. 



GoticBum in Phrygia. — Alliance with Ephesus. A 

 medallion of Oaracalla with the unusual inscription 

 OMONOIA nPOC E<t>€CIOYC. Reverse, the goddess 

 Kybele seated between effigy of Ephesian Artemis and 

 personification of City of Cotiseum. 



Synaus in Phrygia. — Bronze of Philip Senior. Reverse, the 

 god Sabazios on horseback. 



Temenothyrce in Phrygia.— A large medallion of the age 

 of the Antonines with a very interesting reverse type, 

 Herakles striding to left with a torch in his extended right 

 hand. Before him is a statue of a goddess (Pallas ?) on a 

 column and a running figure of Eros. Herakles appears to 

 be setting fire to some temple. An imperfect specimen of 

 this coin in the French Coll. is wrongly described by Mionnet 

 as Herakles burning the heads of the Hydra. 



Lycia. — A silver stater of the satrap Artembares 

 (5th cent. B.C.) and a lead trial-piece or pattern for a silver 

 coin, of which no specimens have yet been discovered. From 

 the Bunhury Collection. 



Lycia ? — Two archaic silver coins recently found in the 

 island of Nisyros. Obverse, Bull's head of decorative style ; 

 reverse, Incuse of Lycian style. 



Lycia. — Erhhina. Dynast of Telmessus. — Silver stater. 

 Obverse, Head of Athena ; reverse, ^Epj^jdiva in Lycian 

 characters. Herakles fighting; nude but for his lion's 

 skin, which covers his head and left arm. He has a quiver 

 at his left side and carries his bow and club. A rising 

 ground is represented under his feet. This coin, which 

 belongs to the 5th cent. B.C., bears some likeness to a bronze 

 figure in the Bibliotheque Nationale (Babelon-Blanchet, Cat. 

 No. 518) which is probably a copy of an original about 100 

 years older than the coin. 



Gagce in Lycia. — A unique drachm of the Federal type. 

 The only known silver coin of the town. 



(Enoanda in Lycia. — A unique stater of the early part of 

 the 2nd cent. B.C. Obverse, a fine head of Zeus with a 

 sceptre behind ; reverse, OINOANA€(0N, Eagle on thunder- 

 bolt : the only known coin of the town, and additionally 

 important as fixing the attribution to a neighbouring city, 

 Termessus ad (Enoanda, of a number of coins which have 

 hitherto been confused with those of the Pisidian city 

 Termessus Major. 



