358 POSITIONS OF VICTOR STATUES IN THE ALTIS. 
were discovered south of the Philippeion; the base of the statue of 
Philonikos, a son of Philistos, was also found south of the Philip- 
peion,! and that of another unnamed son was discovered to the west 
of the Prytaneion,? while the place of finding of that of Charops, the 
son of Telemachos, has not been recorded.? The base of the monu- 
ment of Aristarchos was found east of the Byzantine church,‘ that of 
Damaithidas, son of Menippos of Elis, a victor cuvwptde TwALKH, West 
of the Council-house (south building),® and that of Thrasymachos (or 
Thrasymedes) in the Nordostgraben.6 A fragment of the base of the 
statue of Demokrates of Antioch in Karia was found in the bed of the 
river Kladeos,’ that of a victor whose name began with Demo . . ., 
northeast of the Prytaneion,® while that of Thaliarchos, the son of 
Soterichos of Elis, victor 70& tatéwy kal avdpav, was found east of the 
Council-house.? Bases from two statues of Menedemos, son of Mene- 
demos of Elis, victor curwpidt mwAukn, were found, one east of the 
temple of Zeus, the other inside the Heraion.!° Lykomedes, the son of 
Aristodemos of Elis, victor cvywpt6. twAuKy, also had two statues; the 
base of one was found in front of the West Byzantine wall on the south 
side of the temple of Zeus, that of the other in the Westgraben. 
The front part of the base of the statue of Archiadas, the son of Timolas 
of Elis, who won KéAnTe TwALK@, Was discovered southwest of the tem- 
ple of Zeus, on the Terrace wall.!2 That of an unknown victor in the 
dtavdos, the son of . . . krates of Miletos, was found near the Ost- 
halle,® while that inscribed with the name of Tiberius Claudius Nero 
of Rome, who won a victory TeOpimmw just before the end of the cen- 
tury, was found south of the Eretrian Bull.™ 
Nineteen inscribed base-fragments have been referred to the post- 
Christian centuries, thirteen to the first, three to the second, and three 
to the third. The spaces around the temple of Zeus (especially its 
eastern front) are again the favorite ones. ‘Thus the bases of three 
statues were found east of the temple (one 7” situ), two near its south- 
eastern corner, three at the northeastern corner (one, that of Germani- 
cus Czsar, the nephew of Tiberius, just to the north of the Eretrian 
Bull, and so originally standing here near that of his uncle), while 
another stood opposite the fifth column from the east on the north 
side of the temple. Most of these statues must have been passed by 
Pausanias in his first é$odos, which is, perhaps, another evidence of 
his dependence on older lists in compiling his own. Two other bases 
were found to the southwest of the temple, one of them near its cor- 

‘Inschr.v. Ol., no. 205; Foerster, 822 (undated). 2Tbid., no. 206; Foerster, 828 (undated). 
3Tbid., no. 207. 47 bid., no. 208. 
5Ibid., no. 209; Foerster, 482. S7bid., no. 210. TIbid., no. 211. 87bid., no. 212. 
*Ibid., no. 213; Foerster,614,619. 1°Jbid., nos. 214, 215. "Jbid., nos. 216, 217; Foerster, 550. 
#[bid., no. 218; Foerster, 535 (=Ol. ? 171=96 B. C.). 
8[bid., no. 219; Foerster, 593; he won in Ol. 190 (=20 B. C.). 
M47bid., no. 220; Foerster, 601, who dates the victory in Ol. (?) 194 (=4 B. C.). 
