INDEX. 
Bouleuterion; see Council-house. 
Bouprasion, Nestor contends at, 9. 
Bow, attribute of Philesian Apollo, 119. 
Boxer Vase, from Hagia Triada, 6, 7, 235. 
Boxers, bases of statues of, at Olympia, 240, 241; 
bearded, on University of Pennsylvania 
Panathenaic amphora, 239; between groups 
of warriors and dancers on an eighth 
century B. C. vase, 13; boxer known as 
“man with crushed ear,’ 167; on Boxer 
Vase, 6,7; bronze head of boxer or pancra- 
tiast, from Olympia, 146, 254, 255, 322; 
on bronze shield from Mount Ida, 235; 
caps of, 165f.; head in Munich, with swol- 
len ears, 63, 168; positions of, on vases, 239; 
pyctae (?), by Myron, 188; on pyxis, from 
Knossos, 7; on r.-f. kylix in the British 
Museum, 239; on r.-f. kylix of Douris, 239; 
Seated Boxer, of Museo delle Terme, 145f.; 
‘statues of, represented in motion, 243; 
statue of, with Diadoumenos motive, 155; 
statue in Kassel, 242; statue in Lansdowne 
House, London, 155; statue in Palazzo 
Albani, Rome, 165; statue from Sorrento, 
242; statuette of, from Olympia, 28, 244; 
swollen ear of, 240, 241. 
Boxing, 234f.; antiquity of, 235; in Crete, 3, 5, 6, 7, 
235;in Homer, 8, 234; invented by Theseus, 
235; more dangerous than pankration, 246; 
most popular sport at Olympia, 235; one 
of oldest sports, 234; when introduced at 
Olympia, 235; boys’ contest, when intro- 
duced at Olympia, 235; painful character 
of, 234f.; two periods of, 235; at Sparta, 
167; on vases, 239. 
Boxing-gloves, Ba a Boxer is ie if va a 
Crete, 235; in Homer, 235; described by 
Pausanias and Philostratos, 236; forms of, 
236; heavy (agatpar or ivavres d€ets), 235f.; 
soft (iuavres Nerrol or perixar), 235f.; 
method of putting on, 236; not used in 
pankration, 246; soft, on bronze arm found 
in sea off Antikythera, 236; on fist from 
Verona, 238; on forearms of Seated Boxer of 
the Museo delle Terme, 237, 238; on statue 
from Herculaneum, 238; on statue from 
Sorrento, 238. 
Boy Pte on a Fillet (avadovpevos), by Pheidias, 
150. 
Boy Crowning Himself, copies of statue of, identified 
with statue of Kyniskos at Olympia, 156; 
on funerary relief, 155. 
Boy victors, statues of, at Olympia, 31; fragments 
of, 324, 325; less than life-size, 46; boy 
victor (?) from Sparta, head from statue of, 
305f.; as case of assimilation, 319f.; as an 
eclectic work, 37, 38; chiefly Lysippan, 311, 
318; compared with head of Philandridas, | 
316; surface modeling of, 318. 
Branchidai, 304, 336. 
Brasidas, games in honor of, 11. 
Bribery, of Olympic victors, 33; at Epidauros, the | 
Isthmus, etc., 34. 
381 
Brimias, statue at Olympia, 346. 
Bronze, used for victor statues, 321f.; more expen- 
sive than marble, 323, 326; bronze and 
stone monuments together, 325. 
Brunn, on Aeginetan art, 124; on archaic Attic art, 
124; on Daidalian £éava, 328; on the Oil- 
pourer in Munich, 134; on Olympia pedi- 
ment groups, 114; on Standing Diskobolos, 
76; on symmetry and rhythm, 66; on Tux 
bronze, 207; on the Vaison and Farnese 
types of the Diadoumenos, 154. 
Brutus, the, of Cicero, 60. 
Brygos, r.-f. kylix in style of, 204. 
Bull, in Crete, 1f.; zone of the, at Olympia, 355. 
Bulle, on boxer head from Olympia, 255; on bronze 
statue of youth found in sea off Antiky- 
thera, 82; on the Polykleitan Diadoumenos, 
151; on Doryphoros, 227; on dying hoplite 
relief, 209; on Egyptian influence on early 
Greek sculpture, 330; on ephebe statue 
from Akropolis, 115; on Farnese Herakles, 
253; on hair technique of Greek sculptors, 
53; on the Jdolino, 141, 142; on the Oil- 
pourer, 134; on Tux bronze, 207; on statues 
of two wrestlers, from Herculaneum, 231. 
Bull-grappling, in Crete, 2f.; in Tiryns, 2, 3; on Vaph- 
eio cups, 355; in Thessaly, 5; in Viterbo, 5. 
Bull-ring, ivory model of, from Knossos, 3. 
Burgon vase, 260. 
Bybon, inscribed solos of, from Olympia, 22, 218. 
Bykelos, statue at Olympia, 120. 
Byzantine church, the, at Olympia, 347, 356f. 
Byzantine walls, at Olympia, 345, 357, 358, 359. 
Caere (Cerveteri), Amphiaraos vase from, 13 and 
note 1; hydrias from, 52. 
Candia, Museum at, 2, 3. 
Canina, eae the Apoxyomenos of the Vatican, 
288. 
Canon, of Polykleitos, 69. 
Canons of proportions, 65f. 
Cap, of boxers and pancratiasts, 165f.; on athlete 
head called Juba II, 166; on relief in Rome, 
166; on Munich kylix, 166-167; on statu- 
ette from Autun, 167. 
Capua, bronze statuette from, 207. 
Caracalla, baths of, 252. 
Caricature, Theban law against, 57. 
Casa Pures Florence, arm of Diskobolos from, 
Caskey, L. D., on Sparta head of boy athlete, 305, 
306, 310, 319. 
Castel Porziano, copy of Diskobolos from, 184. 
Castellani copy of Spinario, 202. 
Catania, coins of, showing Nike, 182. 
Cauldron, as early prize, from Cumae, 20. 
Celery, fresh, used for wreaths at Nemea, 20, 21; 
wild, used for wreaths at the Isthmus, 21. 
Celetizontes pueri, of Kanachos, 120. 
Cerveteri; see Caere. 
Cestus, described by Virgil, 239; metal, invented by 
Romans, 238, 239; not mentioned by late 
Greek writers, 239; not used in Greek 
contésts, 235. 
