274. MONUMENTS OF HIPPODROME AND MUSICAL VICTORS. 
in Portugal,! represents a figure dressed in a long chiton. Wolters 
suggests that it may represent an apobates, but the absence of the 
usual armor makes it probable that a charioteer is intended. In 
a future section we shall discuss the apobates in the horse-race at 
Olympia known as xadr7. , 

Fic. 65.—Charioteer. Relief from the small Frieze of 
the Mausoleion, Halikarnassos. British Museum, 
London. 
STATUES OF CHARIOTEERS. 
The best-preserved slab from the small Parian marble chariot-frieze 
from the Mausoleion of Halikarnassos, now in the British Museum, 
represents a male figure standing in a chariot (Fig. 65). This long- 
haired charioteer, dressed in a tunic which extends to the feet and is 
girded at the waist, is leaning forward in an eager attitude. The folds 


1Tts antiquity has been questioned by Kekulé, who is quoted by F. W.; see on no. 1838. 
2B. M. Sculpt., I], 1037, Pl. XVIII; von Mach, 231; Ant. Denkm., II, 2, 1893-4, Pl. XVIII, 0; 
Collignon, II, p. 327, fig. 165; Newton, Travels and Discoveries in the Levant, 1865, II, p. 133, 
Pl. XVI; Gardner, Hbk., p. 430, fig. 111. It is 2 feet 1.5 inches high. 
