PAPILIONIN^. 
217 
Localities of Papilio Brasidas. 
I. South Africa. 
B. Cape Colony. 
h. Eastern Districts. — King William's Town and East London {W. 
S. M. U Urban). 
D. Kaffraria Proper. — Bashee River (J". II. Boioker). 
E. Natal. 
a. Coast Districts. — D'Urban. "Lower Umkomazi." — J. H. 
Bowker. 
h. Upper Districts. — Maritzburg (aS'. Windham). 
F. Zululand.— Etshowe {A. M. Goodrich). 
II. Other African Regions. 
A. South Tropical. 
a. Western Coast. — Angola (Monteiro).^' — Druce. 
, 306. (7.) Papilio Corinneus, Bertoloni. 
j Papilio Corinneus, Bert., "Mem. Acad. Sci. Bologn., 1849, p. 9, t. i, fF. 1-3." 
j Papilio Pijlades, Var. a., G. R. Gray, Cat. Lep. Brit. Mus., i. p. 8 (1852). 
Papilio Anthemeiies, Wallengr., K. Sv. Vet.-Akad. Handl., 1857; Lep, 
Rhop. Caffr., p. 6, n. 5. 
Exp. al, {$) 3 in. 0-3 lin. ; (?) 3 in. 1-4L liu. 
Very nearly allied to P. Pylades, Fab. 
$ Black, with a large luhite faUh and white, spots in both wings. 
[ Fore-iving : in discoidal cell four spots of very different shape and size, 
viz., one very small, more or less rounded, before middle of cell, — the 
; second, a little beyond, of moderate size, oblique, wedge-shaped, reach- 
■ ing about half-way across cell ; the third very much larger, irregularly 
bi-sinuated, slightly oblique, narrow superiorly, but much widened in- 
[ feriorly, extending quite across cell ; and the fourth, about the size of 
the second, but rounded, in upper part of cell close to extremity ; just 
beyond extremity of cell a short transverse row of three very small 
spots, of which the uppermost is the largest and inclining to be quad- 
rate ; a discal macular band composed of nine spots very different in 
form and size, viz., the first and second subapical, of moderate size, 
the second, the larger and longer, and projecting outwardly consider- 
ably beyond the first ; the third and fourth very small, not far beyond, 
and rather larger than, the second and third spots of the short trans- 
verse row just beyond cell ; the fifth, large, ovate, between lower radial 
and third median nervules next to largest cellular spot ; the sixth, 
, small, or very small, elongate, ovate ; and the seventh, eighth, and 
ninth, greatly enlarged and confluent into a large patch, which occupies 
inner margin for a little beyond base to a little before posterior angle, 
I is bounded superiorly by median nervure and its second nervule, and 
I presents a very prominent, rounded, outward projection of outline 
between second and first median nervules ; close to hind-margin, a 
series of eight rather small rounded spots, of which the lowest is gemi- 
