OLYMPIC VICTOR MONUMENTS ERECTED OUTSIDE OLYMPIA. 369 
Of the first century A. D.: 
28. Xenodamos, of Antikyra in Phokis.1 Pausanias mentions a 
bronze statue of this victor in the Old Gymnasion at Antikyra (X, 
36.9). G. Hirschfeld? had objected to the statement of Pausanias, in 
the passage cited, “that this was the only Olympiad omitted in the 
Elean register,’ because of its inconsistency with other passages which 
state that in the 8th Olympiad,’ in the 34th,* and in the 104th,® the 
games were celebrated by intruders, and not by the Eleans, and 
hence these Olympiads were regarded as invalid and were not entered 
in the Elean registers. However, as Frazer points out,® the case with 
Ol. 211 was different. It was doubtless celebrated by the Eleans 
themselves and its validity was not questioned, but either it was 
never entered in the register, or, if entered, was later struck out. 
Africanus (cf. Philostratos)’ says that the celebration of this Olym- 
piad, which should have fallen 65 A. D., was deferred two years to favor 
Nero, who in 67 A. D. received prizes in six events, including the ten- 
horse chariot-race.* The Eleans, later being ashamed of thus favoring 
the tyrant, probably removed Ol. 211 from the register after his death. 
It may be that for the same reason statues of victors of that Olympiad 
were not set up in the Altis, which would explain why that of Xeno- 
damos was set up in his native city, where Pausanias saw it. Not 
finding his name in the Elean register, Pausanias would reason that 
this victory fell in the disgraced Ol. 211.9 
28a. Titos Phlabios ered: son of Artemidoros, of Adana in 
Kilikia.!° ‘The inscribed marble tablet from the base of the statue which 
this victor erected in Naples in honor of his father Artemidoros, son of 
Athenodoros, is preserved. It contains a list of his own many victories 
in TayKpat.oyv and 7a\7n in games held in Greece, Italy, Asia Minor, and 
Egypt. Though the statue was erected to his father, the long inscrip- 
tion shows that it was intended quite as much to celebrate his own 
athletic prowess." 
29. Titos Phlabios Metrobios, son of Demetrios, of Iasos, Karia.” 
The inscribed base of his statue has been found in Iasos." 

1He won rayxpar.ioy dvdpav in Ol. 211 (=67 A. D.): P., X, 36.9. 
2A. 2, AL, 1882, p. 110. SA yy Pees 4T bid. 
5P., VI, 22.3; 4.2; cf. 8.3 (where Eubotas won reOpiamw, no. 17 supra). 
6V, pp. 454-455; cf. Hitz.-Bluemn., III, 2, p. 829. 7Vit. Apoll. Tyan., V, 7. 
8Suetonius, Nero, 24; Dio Cassius, LXIII, 14. Foerster, 642-647. 
9Cf. also Schubart, Pausanias u. seine Anklaeger, Jb. f. cl. Philologie, XXIX, 1883, pp. 472 f.; 
Brunn, 1bid., XXX, 1884, p. 24; and Foerster, 641 and under no. 638. 
10T, Phlabios Artemidoros won rayparwov twice. He was also repiodovixns. The Magna Capi- 
tolia, in which he was also victor, were instituted by Domitian in 86 A. D.; Foerster, 657, 661, 
proposes Ols. (?) 215 and 216 (=81 and 85 A. D.) for the two victories. 
NC’, J. G., III, 5806; Kaibel, Inscript. Gr. Sicil. et Ital., 1890, no. 746. 
2T, Belaiios Metrobios won 6éAcxos, first of his countrymen, in Ol. 217 (=89 re Dayar ed: 
Boeckh on the inscription (see next note) and Rutgers, p. 91, n. 2; Foerster, 665. He was also 
meptodovikns and won ddXcxos at the Capitolia in Rome, as “first of all men.” 
ted... 11;-2682. 
