THE AFFILIATED SCHOOLS OF ARGOS AND SIKYON. VA 
of the boy runner Lykinos of Heraia. ‘Their victories fell between Ols. 
94 and 103 (=404 and 368 B.C.).1 The great Lysippos had the same 
number of victor statues as Kleon, and also two honor statues at Olym- 
pia: those of the equestrian victor Troilos of Elis, of the Akarnanian pan- 
cratiast Philandridas, of the wrestler Cheilon of Patrai, of the pancra- 
tiast Polydamas of Skotoussa, and of the hoplite-runner Kallikrates. 
Their victories occurred between Ols. 102 and 115 (= 372 and 320B.C.).2 
The son of Lysippos, Daippos, made two statues, one for the Elean 
boy boxer Kallon and the other for the Elean Nikandros, who won the 
double foot-race. ‘Their victories fell within the activity of the sculp- 
tor, Ols. 115 and 125 (=320and280B.C.).2 Daitondas madethestatue of 
the Elean boy boxer Theotimos, who won his victory some time between 
Ols. 116 and 120 (= 316 and 300 B.C.).4. Eutychides, the most famous 
pupil of Lysippos, famed alike as a bronze founder, statuary, and painter, 
carved the statue of the boy runner Timosthenes of Elis, who won some 
time between Ols. 115 and 125 (=320 and 280 B.C.).> Pliny gives Ol. 
121 (=296 B.C.) as the floruit of this sculptor, which was probably 
the date of the erection of his most famous work, the colossal bronze 
Tyche, as tutelary deity of the city of Antioch on the Orontes, which 
was founded by Seleukos I in Ol. 119.3 (= 302 B.c.).6 This shows that 
Eutychides was already by that date a famed sculptor, having begun 
1Deinolochos: P., VI, 1.4; Hyde, 5; Foerster, 330; Hysmon: P., VI, 3.9; Hyde, 31; Foerster, 
347; Kritodamos: P., VI, 8.5; Hyde, 80; Foerster, 337; Inschr. v. Ol., 167; I. G. B., no. 96; 
Alketos: P., VI, 9.2; Hyde, 86; Foerster, 320; Lykinos: P., VI, 10.9; Hyde, 100; Foerster, 
336. On Kleon, see Brunn, pp. 285; J. G. B., to no. 95. 
2Troilos: P., VI, 1.4; Hyde, 6; Foerster, 338 and 345; Inschr. v. Ol., 166; the dates of his two 
victories, Ols. 102, 103, are known; Philandridas: P., VI, 2.1; Hyde, 10; Foerster, 393; his vic- 
tory fell either in Ol. 102 or Ol. 103; Cheilon: P., VI, 4.6-7; Hyde, 41; Foerster, 384 and 392; P., 
because of the dating of Lysippos, inferred that this victor fell either at Cheroneia (338 B.C.) 
or Lamia (322 B. C.), both of which dates fall within the working years of the sculptor; see 
P. Gardner, J. H. S., XXV, 1905, p. 246; Polydamas: P., VI, 5.1; Hyde, 47; Foerster, 279; 
Africanus gives us the date of his victory as Ol. 93, though the statue was set up after the vic- 
tor’s death; Kallikrates, of Magnesia on the Mzander: P., VI, 17.3; Hyde, 175; Foerster, 
390 and 397 (for two victories). Lysippos made two honor statues for Pythes of Abdera: 
P., VI, 14.12; Hyde, 134 a. 
3Kallon: P., VI, 12.6; Hyde, 106; Foerster, 410; Nikandros: P., VI, 16.5; Hyde, 157; 
Foerster, 408 and 413 (two victories). On the sculptor, see Pauly-Wissowa, IV, p. 2013; 
Brunn, p. 407. 
4P., VI, 17.5; Hyde, 181; Foerster, 401. On Daitondas, see Robert in Pauly-Wissowa, IV, 
p. 2015 (who dates the sculptor at the beginning of the third century B. C., because of an 
inscribed base found at Delphi: J. G. B., 97; C. I. G. G. S., I, 2472); cf. Schmidt, 4. M., V, 
1880, pp. 197-8, no. 58; cf. Brunn, p. 418. 5P., VI, 2.6 f.; Hyde, 15; Foerster, 424. 
6H, N., XXXIV, 51; cf. XXXIV, 78 (for his image of the Eurotas river); XX XV, 141 (as 
painter). The Tyche is mentioned by P., VI, 2.7.. Many copies of this work in marble, 
bronze, and silver have been identified, especially a marble statuette in the Vatican: B. B., 
no. 154; Helbig, Fuchrer, I, 362; F. W., 1396; von Mach, 256; etc. Fora list of copies, see R. 
Foerster, Jb., XII, 1897, pp. 145 f.; cf. Amelung, Fuehrer d. Florenz, nos. 261-2; and P. Gardner, 
J. H. S.,1X, 1888, pp. 75 f. and Pl. V (silver statuette). On the sculptor, see Robert in Pauly- 
Wissowa, VI, pp. 1532-3; Brunn, I, pp. 411 f.; II, p. 157 (painter); Overbeck, II, pp. 172 f.; 
Collignon II, pp. 485 f.; Murray?, II, pp. 354f. Robert, /. c., gives three other sculptors of 
the same name; cf. J. G. B., nos. 143 and 244-9; Homolle, B. C. H., XVIII, 1894, pp. 336 f. 
