378 
Alki, temple of Apollo at, 336. 
Alkibiades, victor at Olympia, 257; so-called Alki- 
biades of the Vatican, 199. 
Alkibios, base of statue of, from Akropolis, 284. 
Alkinoos, King of Scheria, 210. 
Alkmena, 10. 
Alpheios, river at Olympia, 49, 258. 
Altars, at Olympia: of Aphrodite, 351; near Stadion, 
283; of Nymphs, 351; of Seasons, 351; 
scattered positions of, 341; of Zeus; see 
Great Altar of Zeus. 
Altis at Olympia, East Byzantine wall of, 345, 357; 
erection of statues in, 27, 99; excavation 
of, 24; honor statues in, 339; location of 
earliest statues in, 299; North Byzantine 
wall of, 359; periegesis of Pausanias in, 151, 
298; positions of victor statues in, 339f.; 
processional entrance of, 347; processional 
way of, 348; Roman enlargement of, 348; 
routes (€godor) of Pausanias in, 339f.; South 
Terrace wall of, 346; South wall of, 339, 
341, 345, 347, 352, 357; Southwest gate of, 
360; statues “within,” 347; topography of, 
339; West Byzantine wall of, 358; West 
wall of, 347, 355f. 
Alypos, sculptor, 120. 
Amaltheia, ivory horn of, at Olympia, 264, 265. 
Amastris, coin of, showing figure of Hermes, 78, 
Amazon, of Polykleitos, 159; torso of Atalanta 
from Tegea pediment, draped as, 306. 
Ambrakia, 105. 
Amelung, W., on supposed absence of libation- 
pouring in athletic art, 140; on head in 
Turin, 93; on statuette in Vatican, 212, 
244. 
Amenartas; see Amenerdis. 
Amenerdis, Egyptian queen, statue of, 331. 
Amenemhat III, co-regent of Horfuabra, 330. 
Amentum; see Thong. 
Amertas, statue of, at Olympia, 117. 
Amphiaraos vase, in Berlin, 13, 269, 280; Am- 
phiaraos, on chest of Kypselos, 269; reliefs 
in honor of, 273. 
Amphiareion, at Oropos, 272, 273. 
Amphidamas, games of, 19, 
Amphiktyonic League, 17. 
Amphion, sculptor, 277. 
Amphipolis, games at, 11. 
Amyklai, temple of Apollo at, 19. 
Amykos, boxing match of, with Polydeukes, 269; 
eae of boxing-gloves ascribed to, 
Amyntas, statue at Olympia, 129, 354. 
Analogy, in Greek art, 66 
Anatomy, knowledge of, in Greek sculpture, 56; 
in Aeginetan gable statues, 124; in Ligou- 
r16 bronze, 111; studied in Alexandria, 289. 
Anauchidas, statue at Olympia, 341. 
Anaxandros, statue at Olympia, 130, 266. 
Anaxilas, as dedicator of Delphi Charioteer, 278. 
Ancestors, worship of, in Greece, 14. 
Ancient writings of the Eleans, 15. 
Andokides, vase-painter, 229, 230. 
INDEX. 
Andreas, sculptor, 118. 
Angelion, sculptor, 122, 304, 334. See also Tektaios. 
Aniconic statues, 58. 
Anochos, statue at Olympia, 110, 111. 
Anointing, as athletic motive, 133f. 
Antaios, bout with Herakles, on proto-Attic am- 
phora, 13. 
Antenor, sculptor, 174, 175. 
Anthologies, Greek, 43, 239, 368. 
Anthropometry in Greek sculpture, 68. 
Antidotos, painter, 29, 233. 
Antigenes, statue at Olympia, 357. 
Antignotos, sculptor, 136. 
Antigonos, statue at Olympia, 346. 
Antikythera, bronze statue of youth from sea near, 
8Of.; statuette from sea near, 78, 79. 
Antioch, date of founding of, 121. 
Antipatros, statue at Olympia, 118; father of, 
bribed by Syracuse, 33. 
Antoninus Pius, coins of, showing pine,21. 
Apellas, sculptor, 131, 267, 367. 
Aphaia, temple of, on Aegina, 123f. 
Aphrodeisios, Tiberios Klaudios, statue at Olympia, 
359; victor in horse-race, 262. 
Aphrodite, altar at Olympia, 351; statue in Heraion 
at Olympia, 326; temple at Naukratis, 334. 
A pobates, chariot-race, 272f.; armor worn in, 272, 
273; known at Athens and in Beeotia, 273; 
preserves tradition of Homeric warfare, 
272; on reliefs, 272; apobates, horse-race, 
at Olympia, 282f. 
Apollas, lost work of, on Olympic victors, 45, 
130, 343. 
Apollo, as athlete 88; beaten in running, 76; beats 
Ares in boxing, 88, 235, 285; beats Hermes 
in running, 88, 285; as charioteer, 129, 270; 
combat with Herakles, 88, 89; cult statue 
of, represented on vases, 335; as god of 
boxing at Delphi, 235; as god of boxing in 
Homer, 235; as god of contests, 75; as god 
of youth, 88; hymn to, 25; on coins of 
Athens, 90; on relief in Capitoline, 89; on 
relief with Artemis and Leto, in Louvre, 284; 
tripods in worship of, 19. 
Statues: Apollo Alexitkakos, by Kalamis, 
90; from temple of Apollo at Alki, 336; from 
Delos, 334, 335; colossal, from Delos, 336; 
from Mausoleion, 311; colossal, from Olym- 
pia, 91; Philesian Apollo, by elder Kana- 
chos, 107, 118, 336; from Porto d’Anzio, 144; 
Praxitelian, in Medici Gardens, Rome, 
313; from West gable, Olympia, 114-116. 
Statuettes: bronze from Naxos, in Berlin, 
74, 119; Payne Knight bronze, British Mu- 
seum, 108, 119; bronze, from Piombino, 
Louvre, 118; Sciarra bronze, Rome, 119. 
Temples: of Apollo Lykios, 364; at 
Bassai, 327; at Naukratis, 334. 
“Apollo,” type of, in sculpture, 100f.; Aeginetan in- 
fluence on, 102; Choiseul-Gouffer, 89f., 91, 
148; funerary in character, 336, 337; 
“grinning” and “stolid” groups, 100; name 
“Apollo,” 337; name rightly applied to 
