Restored:—Head, right armpit and shoulder-blade, three fingers of right hand; left arm from middle of biceps; right leg from the knee; left knee with part of thigh, and part of left foot. Cockerell, pl. 15, No. 6; pl. 16; Blouet, III., pl. 65, fig. 2.

167. Warrior advancing with shield extended, and right hand raised to hurl spear, closely corresponding to No. 163. Perhaps Aeneas.

Restored:—Head (which should probably be bearded), right armpit and breast, fingers, parts of shield and legs. Cockerell, pl. 15, No. 4; pl. 16; Blouet, III., pl. 66, fig. 2.

168. Archer kneeling and drawing his bow. He wears a Phrygian cap, which has holes in the front for a metal wreath. (Compare the wreath on the Ephesian fragment No. 46, 12); also closely-fitting breeches and coat of leather. This figure, which is always known as Paris, closely corresponds with the 'Teucer,' No. 162.

Restored:—Tips of cap, nose and chin; some fingers, and the forepart of the left foot. Cockerell, pl. 15, No. 7; pl. 16; Blouet, III., pl. 68, fig. 2; Brunn, Denkmaeler, No. 24.

169. Wounded Trojan, leaning on the right arm. An arrow may have been fixed in the left knee between the thumb and forefinger.

Restored:—Head, left arm, part of right forearm and hand; both legs from the knees. Cockerell, pl. 15, No. 8; pl. 16; Blouet, III., pl. 65, fig. 1.

170. The pediment is surmounted by an acroterion, consisting of a palmette between two large volutes, which are for the most part restorations. (Cockerell, pls. 1, 4.)

On each side of the acroterion is an architectonic female figure, treated in the same designedly archaic style as the figure of Athenè.