302 APPENDIX III. 



PI. 36, No. 11,) the third line begins with a word 

 which a slight and indispensable correction alters 

 into Arttoapara; but that part of the inscrip- 

 tion is too imperfect for us to guess at the 

 meaning. 



The dative case, Arttoaparu, occurs in the 

 middle inscription, below the battle-scene, of a 

 monument at Limyra, published by Sir C. Fel- 

 lows, Lycia, page 207, and republished here, 

 No. 22, page 256. All that is yet understood of 

 that inscription is that it was erected by Tewor- 

 ssele: it is not his tomb, for we find that re- 

 corded in an adjoining inscription, No. 21 ; per- 

 haps, therefore, No. 22 may be the tomb of 

 Arttoapara himself. 



No. 17. — Head of Mercury: rev, A Lion walking, to 

 the left, in a sunk square surrounded by a bead- 

 ing, with the legend ^POF^TEI^E. 

 Silver. In the Munich Collection. 



The name on this coin is well preserved, it 

 is to be read Arofuteyese : the same word occurs 

 on the Xanthus obelisk, line eighteen, south-west 

 side. 



The drawing was made from a cast of the 

 reverse of the coin sent to Sir C. Fellows from 

 Munich. 



