366 POSITIONS OF VICTOR STATUES IN THE ALLIS 
honor of his ancestors who had won in various athletic contests, which 
was discovered by the French excavators there in 1894. We there 
mentioned that Preuner found the same metrical inscription which 
appeared on the base of the statue of Agias, the best preserved of the 
group (Pl. 28 and Fig. 68), in the journal of Stackelberg,’ who had 
copied it in the early part of the nineteenth century from a base in Phar- 
salos which has since disappeared. ‘This Thessalian inscription con- 
tained the additional words that Lysippos of Sikyon was the sculptor. 
In both inscriptions the victories of Agias at Olympia and elsewhere 
are noted. ‘Thus we know of two statues of Agias, one at Delphi, the 
other at Pharsalos, both presumably by Lysippos. Preuner also thinks 
that a third statue may have stood in Olympia. 
15. Cheimon, of Argos.2 In mentioning the statue of Cheimon at 
Olympia by the sculptor Naukydes of Argos, Pausanias, in the same 
passage (VI, 9.3), records another which once stood in Argos, but was 
later removed to the temple of Peace in Rome.’ 
16. Leon, son of Antikleidas (or Antalkidas), of Sparta.4 A fragment 
of Polemon® mentions a statue of this victor. It may have stood in 
Olympia, as Foerster without good grounds assumes, or it may have 
stood elsewhere. 
17. Eubotas (Eubatas or Eubatos), of Kyrene.® Besides his statue 
at Olympia recorded by Pausanias (VI, 8.3), we learn of another set 
up at Kyrene by the victor’s wife for his devotion.’ 
1Pharsalos, p. 28." See supra, pp. 286-287. 
*Cheimon won 7rdéA7y in Ol. 83 (=448 B. C.): Oxy. Pap.; cf. Robert, O. S., pp. 171 and 191; 
Hyde, no. 88. Foerster, 285, had proposed Ol. (?) 94 (=404 B.C.), on the basis of the older 
dating of Naukydes=423-390 B.C. (see Robert, Arch. Maerchen, 1886, p. 107). Kalkmann, 
Pausanias der Perieget, 1886, p. 192, n. 1, thought that the statue at Olympia and the one at 
Rome were identical; Gurlitt, Veber Pausanias, 1890, pp. 374 and 423, n. 38 a, has shown that 
the assumption is unfounded. 
8The temple of Peace was built by Vespasian (between A. D. 70 and 75) east of the Forum 
Augusti. Pliny (H. N., XXXIV, 84, and XX XV, 102) mentions works of art in it; Josephus 
(de Bell. Judaico, VII, 5.7) also describes it. 
4Leon, according to Eustathius, on Iliad, II, 851 (=p. 361, 10), won re@pimr7w in Ol. 85 (=440 
B. C.). This date is followed by Schubart, Pausanias und seine Anklaeger, Jb. f. cl. Phiiol., 
XXX, 1884, p. 99, and Preger, Inscript. Gr. metricae ex scriptoribus praeter anthologiam collectae, 
(Lipsiae, 1891), on no. 128. He wonin Ol. 89 (=424 B.C.), according to Polemon (fragm. 22), the 
date followed by Foerster, 264 and 264 N. Foerster places Arkesilaos of Sparta (=250) as 
victor teOpimmg in Ol. (?) 85; Hyde (13) places Arkesilaos either in Ol. 86 or Ol. 87, leaving 
Ol. 85 free for Leon. Polemon (fragm. 22) calls Leon the “‘father of Antikleidas”’; Preger, op. 
cit., p. 49, proposes the ‘“‘son of Antikleidas,” thus having Leon win with his father’s chariot. 
Bergk, P./. G., III, p. 40, note, changed the name to Antalkidas. 
5Fragm., 22 (=schol. on Euripides, Hippolytus, 230); see F. H. G., III, p. 122; cf. P.1.G., 1. ¢. 
6Fubotas (on the name, cf. Hitz.-Bluemn., II, 2, pp. 573-574) won ordévor in Ol. 93 (=408 
B. C.): Afr.; Xen., Hell., I, 2.10; Diodoros, XIII, 68.1; and re@pimmw in Ol. 104 (=304 B. C.): 
P., VI, 8.3 and cf. VI, 4.2; Foerster, 277, 350; Hyde, 75. Pausanias (VI, 8.3) says that his 
Olympia statue was made before his victory. Ol. 104 was a non-Olympiad; see on no. 28 infra 
(Xenodamos), p. 369 and notes. 
TAelian, Var. Hist., X, 2. 
