MERGE TO GYRENE. 
499 
above, as we have already observed. It is probable, however, that 
some approach to the orchestra (where the seats allotted to persons 
of rank were usually placed) was contrived from the lower ground 
upon a level with it ; but the whole of that part has been so com- 
pletely washed away, that we had no means of ascertaining what 
arrangements had been made there. The road to the theatre 
appears to have been through the quarries to the south-eastward 
of the town ; and the gates by which the audience approached it 
w'ere probably the two which lie to the eastM’ard of the aqueduct, 
and that which was appropriated to the citadel 
ithin the w^alls, to the southward of the town, there appears to 
have been a small building of a circular form, sunk below the level of 
the soil about it, in which there are traces of several ranges of seats, 
which might have belonged to a small theatre of some description, 
perhaps to an Odeum ; but the whole is so much buried with soil, in 
which grass (when we saw it) was growing, that it would be impos- 
sible to obtain any details of it, without a good deal of previous exca- 
vation. It will be seen by a reference to the plate, p. 500, in which 
those details are given, that the ground-plans of some of the build- 
ings of Apollonia may be made out with tolerable certaintyf . The 
Christian churches, in particular, are very decided ; as well as the 
remains of a noble building of a similar form at the western ex- 
* These remarks will be better understood by a reference to the plan of Apollonia 
annexed. 
t U e had proposed to give these plans in a separate plate, upon a larger scale, but a 
subsequent arrangement has prevented us from doing so, and we refer to them accord- 
ingly as they are found in the plan of the city. 
3 S 2 
