BOXERS. 241 
elder Polykleitos,! and of the Rhodian Eukles by Naukydes of the 
Polykleitan circle.” Furtwaengler believed that a number of existing 
statues of the Hermes type reproduced the statue of Aristion, because of 
a similar foot position. Among them the Pentelic marble one in 

Fic. 55.— Boxing and Pankration Scenes. From a r.-f. Kylix. British 
Museum, London. 
Lansdowne House, London, is the best preserved, and most faith- 
fully reproduces the Polykleitan style.® 
1Inschr. v. Ol., 165 (renewed); base drawn in outline in Furtw., Mp., p. 288, fig. 123; Muw., 
p. 503, fig. 90. He won in Ol. 82 (=452 B. C.): Oxy. Pap.; P., VI, 13.6; Hyde, 115; Foerster, 376. 
Here the body weight rested upon the left foot, the right being flat on the ground and turned to 
one side, 1. ¢., in the old scheme of Hagelaidas and his school. 
*Inschr. v. Ol., 159 (renewed); J. G. B., 86. This statue was in the same attitude as that of 
Aristion and was slightly over life-size. He won some time between Ols. (?) 90 and 93 (=420 
and 408 B. C.): P., VI, 6.2; Hyde, 52; Foerster, 297. 
*Michaelis, p. 446, no. 35; Clarac V, 946, 2436 A (wrongly=Antinous). See Furtw., Mp?., 
pp. 288 f. (and fig. 124); Mvw., pp. 503 f. (and fig. 91). Height 1.75 meters (Michaelis). 
