XX LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



PAGE 



V. The Stadium of Cibyra. The greater part of 

 the city is above the stadium, to the right. The plain of 

 Cibyra is seen below, to the left, with the lake of Gul- 

 Hissar, and the rock on which are the supposed ruins of 

 Alimne. ...... 260 



VI. View of Pinara. In the centre is seen the aero • 

 polis hill, its face perforated by hundreds of tombs. On 

 the wooded hill below it stands a great part of the ruins 

 of the city. The mountain in the back-ground is one of 

 the Cragus group. . . . . 294 



WOOD-OUTS. 



I. Rook-tombs at Cadyanda. The precipice in which 

 these tombs were excavated has been shattered by an 

 earthquake, and in the fallen fragments the tombs are 

 preserved entire, probably owing to their having been 

 carved in the most compact portions of the rock. 1 



II. ROCK-TOMB, WITH A LyCIAN AND A LATIN INSCRIP- 

 TION, at Antiphellus. The inscriptions are, of course, of 

 very different dates. This is one of the finest specimens 



of arch-lidded rock-tombs in Lycia. . . 72 



III. Rock-tombs at Phellus. These are carved in 

 imitation of wooden buildings, and are, except the base, 

 entirely detached from the neighbouring rock. . 76 



IV. Lid of a Sarcophagus at Cyane^3, remarkable 

 for its resemblance to some Lycian sculptures at Xan- 

 thus. . . . . . ,114 



V. Portrait of a Chingunee Woman at Limyra. 153 



VI. Remarkable mountain in the chain of Climax 

 near Adalia. ..... 208 



VII. Masonic Emblems carved on the blocks, of which 

 the Turkish ruin called Eski-Khan, on the plain of Pam- 

 phylia, is built. . . . . .227 



