552 POSITIONS OF VICTOR STATUES IN THE ALTIS. 
SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 
From a study of these two routes, and a comparison of the dates 
of the victorious athletes, we can draw the following conclusions as to 
the positions of the victor statues mentioned by Pausanias as standing 
in the Altis at Olympia: 
1. The twenty-eight oldest statues—exclusive of the five already 
mentioned as having been removed from the area of the later temple 
of Zeus?—dating from Ol. 58 (=548 B.C., Pythokritos, 128 b) to OI. 
76 (=476 B. C., Theognetos, 83), 7. ¢., approximately down to the date 
of the founding of the temple,’ stood in the space between the eastern 
front of the temple and the Echo Colonnade, or to the south of it near 
the South Altis wall. Only one statue (that of Protolaos, 48) stood as 
far north as the Eretrian Bull. ‘Thus the southeastern part of the Altis 
was the oldest part dedicated to victor statues. 
2. After this space was mostly filled, the next statues, those dating 
from Ol.77 (=472 B.C., Kallias, 50) to Ol. 93 (=408 B.C., Eubotas, 75), 
i. e., from about the time of the foundation of the temple to near the 
date of the battle of Aigospotamoi, fifty-one in number, stood between 
the Heraion and the Victory of Paionios; only one stood as far south 
as the Altis wall, while seven stood aretad the Chariots, ten around 
the Victory, twenty around the Bull, and the rest further north (in- 
cluding 176, 185 of the second égodos, which stood north of the eastern 
end of the temple). Diagoras and his family (59-63), boxers and 
pancratiasts, had their statues near the older famous boxer Euthymos 
(56); Alkainetos and his sons (64-66), boxers, besides many other 
pugilists, had theirs near the Diagorids; Tellon (102) had his near that 
of his compatriot Epikradios (101); later Achzans had theirs near 
that of their countryman Oibotas (29), and Spartans near that of Chi- 
onis (111); some, as the three victors from Heraia (176, 177, 32),* stood 
far apart only apparently, for the last one had his statue near the Bull, 
and so not far from the other two, though these are named in the second 
€pooos. 
3. From near the date of the battle of Aigospotamoi, down to about 
the birth of Alexander the Great, 7. ¢., from Ol. 94 to Ol. 106 (=404 to 
356 B.C.), thirty-six statues filled in the intervals left among these 
older statues; fifteen stood near the Heraion; five between it and the 
Bull, seven around the Bull, five around the Victory, one near the Chariots, 
and three along the South Altis wall. Euthymenes and Kritodamos 
(78, 80) had their monuments near that of their older countryman (79), 
1See the Catalogue in my de olymp. Stat., (pp. 3 f.) for dates; and cf. ibid., Ch. IV, pp. 72 f., for 
results. ‘The summaries are made only on the basis of the 153 monuments which can be exactly 
or approximately dated. 
*Futelidas (148), Praxidamas (18), Rhexibios (188), Polypeithes and Kalliteles (160-161). 
*On the date of the temple of Zeus (?468-456 B.C.), cf. Doerpfeld, Ol., Ergebn., Textbd., II, 
pp. 19. f. 4 nation (176) is simply called an Arkadian by P., VI, 17. 3. 
