EARLY COINS OF LYCIA. 290 



No. 11. — A Boar, to the right: rev. Triquetra in a 

 sunk square surrounded by a beading. 

 Silver : weight 19 grs. In the British Museum. 

 No. 12. — A Quadruped (perhaps a Bull) standing to 

 the right, much defaced: rev. Triquetra in a 

 square surrounded by a beading. 

 Silver : weight 34f grs. In the British Museum. 

 From the Rev. Mr. DanieU. 

 No. 13. — The fore-parts of a winged Boar, to the left: 

 rev. Triquetra in a sunk square surrounded 

 by a plain line. 

 Silver: weight 148 grs. In the possession of 

 Captain Graves, R.N. 



None of these five coins has any legend. Nos. 

 10 and 11 belong evidently to one town ; and 

 two others, much resembling them, are de- 

 scribed and figured by Mionnet, Suppl. vol. 

 vii. pi. iii. figs. 2 and 3. One of these has 

 two letters below the Boar, which Mionnet in 

 the text reads Al, but which stand in the 

 plate AS, and which I should read Sa. Mion- 

 net refers the coins to Aspendus, but the Tri- 

 quetra proves them to be Lycian. 



No. 14. — A Boar, to the left : rev. A four-armed in- 

 strument resembling a Triquetra, with a rope (?) 

 knotted at one end and joined at the other to 

 the centre of the instrument, in a sunk square 

 surrounded by a beading ; legend of five or six 

 characters, of which only FIT are legible. 



