761. Cast of the upper relief on the left or west side of the portico. View of part of a city on a hill, with castellated walls. Within are towers, with windows and connected by a wall, on which is a relief of three male figures.

Height, 3 feet ½ inch; width, 4 feet 2¼ inches.

762. Cast of the lower relief on the left or west side of the portico. View of part of a city on a hill with castellated walls and turrets, a large pylon (?) and several tombs of forms well known in Lycia. In the lower wall is a relief, with a draped and bearded man leaning on a staff and addressing a smaller figure. For the triangular arch openings in the wall, compare Dodwell, Pelasgic Remains, pl. 27, view of walls of a city near Mesolonghi.

Height, 2 feet 10 inches; width, 4 feet 2½ inches.

763. Cast of the upper relief on the right or east side of the portico. View of part of a city on a hill with castellated walls and turrets. A figure, apparently intended to represent a living man, and not a sculpture, as on the other reliefs, lifts his hand near one of the towers.

Height, 3 feet 2 inches; width, 4 feet ½ inch.

764. Cast of the lower relief on the right or east side of the portico. View of part of a city with castellated walls and turrets, built on natural rocks. On the right is a large structure resembling a tomb. On the left is a staircase, leading up to a door in a turret.

Height, 2 feet 10 inches; width, 4 feet ½ inch. The four reliefs are engraved, Fellows, Lycia, pl. facing p. 142; Benndorf, Reisen in Lykien, I., p. 54; Synopsis, Lycian Room, Nos. 148, 149.

765, 766. The following casts are from a portion of the sculptures decorating a tomb, discovered by Sir C. Fellows, at Cadyanda. The tomb is cut out of a large piece of detached rock, and in type somewhat resembles the large Lycian tombs in the British Museum, or the tomb of Xanthos, shown in the background of pl. iii., the principal difference being in the treatment of the roof. At the end of the tomb are two doors. One door is filled with an immovable panel, with a figure of a draped bearded man holding an oinochoè, and inscribed Σάλας, and in Lycian zzala. The second door is believed to have been fitted with a panel, having the wife of Salas in relief. (Fellows, Lycia, p. 117.) The reliefs, of which casts are preserved in the British Museum, formed a frieze immediately below the cornice on each side of the tomb. Below this frieze on each side was a combat of warriors on a larger scale.

Fellows, Lycia, p. 116; Petersen, Reisen in Lykien, II., p. 193. Views and plans of the tomb are included in the Scharf portfolio of drawings in the British Museum.