OLYMPIC VICTOR MONUMENTS ERECTED OUTSIDE OLYMPIA. 365 
finally determined.!' Pausanias refers to a stadion of Ladas, situated 
between Mantinea and Orchomenos in Arkadia, in which Ladas practiced 
running (VIII, 12.5), and also to his grave between Belemina and Sparta 
put 921.1). 
12. Kallias, son of Didymias of Athens.2. Apart from his statue at 
Olympia made by the Athenian painter and sculptor Mikon, men- 
tioned by Pausanias (VI, 6.1),* there was a dedication to him at Athens, 
as we learn from the preserved inscription, which enumerates his 
thirteen victories at Olympia and elsewhere.‘ 
13. Diagoras, son of Damagetos, of Rhodes, the most famous of 
Greek boxers.’ In addition to his statue at Olympia by Kallikles, 
son of Theokosmos of Megara, mentioned by Pausanias (VI, 7.1-2) 
as standing among the group of statues of his sons and grandsons, we 
learn from the scholiast on Pindar, Ol. VII, Argum., who quotes 
Gorgon as his authority,® that this ode, which celebrated the Olympic 
victory of Diagoras, was attached in golden letters to the walls of the 
temple of Athena at Lindos. 
14. Agias, of Pharsalos.7?. We have already, in Ch. VI, discussed the 
group of marble statues set up at Delphi by Daochos of Pharsalos in 
1Foerster assumed that the statue by Myron stood in Olympia. Against this view, see Furt- 
waengler (Mw., p. 379, n. 5), Kalkmann (Jd., X, 1895, p. 56, and XI, 1896, p. 197), Studniczka 
(article cited in note on Theagenes preceding), Brunn (Sitzb. Muen. Akad., 1880, pp. 474 f.). 
Benndorf (de anthol. Gr. Epigram., 1862, 15, n. 1) thought it more probable that the statue stood 
formerly at Olympia, but in the time of Pausanias wasin Rome. ‘Thus itis best to assume two 
statues, the onein Argos not by Myron. Brunn (p. 475) showed that Ladas was a Spartan because 
of P., III, 21. I and VIII, 12.5; Benndorf (op. cit., p. 13) thought that he was an Argive. Kuhnert 
(Jahrbuecher f. cl. Philol., Supplbd., XIV, p. 269 n. 13) argued that the Argive statue was set up 
by the Argive state, an improbable assumption if Ladas were a Spartan. A different Ladas is 
the stade runner from Aigion, mentioned by P., III, 21.1, and X, 23.14. 
2K allias won rayxp&rcov in Ol. 77 (=472 B. C.): P. V, 9.3. He was reprodovixns: C. I. A., 1, 419. 
Cf. Foerster, 208; Hyde, 50. Three other Athenian victors at Olympia named Kallias are 
known: Kallias, son of Pheinippos, won xéAnrein Ol. 54 (=564 B. C.): Foerster, 104; Rutgers, p. 
21; Kallias, son of Hipponikos, grandson of preceding, won reOpirmy thrice in OL. (?) 74, and Ols. 
83, 84 (=484, 448, 444 B. C.): Foerster, 186 a, 242, 247; Rutgers, p. 142; Kallias, mentioned 
by Polyb., XXVIII, 16, won rayxparvov in the second century B. C.: cf. Foerster, under no. 208. 
3Inscribed base found: Jnschr. v. Ol., 146; J. G. B., 41. 
4C¢. I. A., 1, 419. ‘The painter Mikon, mentioned by Pliny, H. N., XXXV, 59, is also named 
by him as a sculptor of athlete statues: op. cit., XXXIV, 88; he is also known from an inscription 
found on the Akropolis at Athens: C. J. 4., 1,418; 7. G. B., 42. 
’Diagoras won mvé in Ol. 79 (=464 B. C.): schol. on Pindar, Ol., VII, Argum., Boeckh, p. 157, 
and Oxy. Pap. He was repiodovixns, and his other victories are mentioned by Pindar and the scho- 
liast on the ode cited. On Diagoras, see H. van Gelder, Geschichte der alten Rhodier, 1900, p. 435; 
on Kallikles, see Robert, O. S., pp. 194f. Cf. Rutgers, p. 43; Foerster, 220; Hyde, 59. 
6Boeckh, p. 157 and cf. p. 159; F. H. G., IV, p. 410 (= Gorgon, fragm. 3). 
7Agias was mepuodovixns. The date of his victory in the rayxparuov at Olympia can not be de- 
termined exactly. Although the dedication of Daochos occurred in the latter half of the fourth 
century B.C., the time of Lysippos (Preuner = between 339 and 331 B.C.: see Ein delphisches Weth- 
geschenk, 1900, p. 12; Homolle dates it more closely between 338 and 59% BsGsB, Ge iy SALLI; 
1899, 440), the victory of Agias fell over a century earlier. Homolle proposed 428 B. C. as the 
floruit of Agias, but gave no date for his victory at Olympia; Preuner (p. 17) sets the victory 
before the middle of the fifth century B. C.; K. K. Smith (Class. Phil., 1910, pp. 169-174) 
has proposed Ol. 80 (=460 B. C.), the only lacuna for rayxparvov in the Oxy. Pap.; however, 
Robert (0. S., p. 183) has placed Timodemos of Acharnai in that place. Foerster, 214, dates 
Timodemos Ol. (?) 78 (=468 B. C.). 
