204. Apollo. Male torso, similar to the preceding, but having no hair on the shoulders.—Temenos of Apollo, Naucratis.

Alabaster; height, 4¾ inches. Naukratis, I., pl. 1, fig. 3.

205. Figure of Apollo (?) standing, with the right leg drawn back, and with the hands pressed against the hips. The hair falls on the shoulders, terminating in a straight line, and intersected with conventional grooves running at right angles to each other.—From Greece, probably from Boeotia.

Marble; height, 2 feet 6¼ inches. Murray, I., pl. 2, p. 107; Arch. Zeit., 1882, pl. 4, p. 51; Mitchell, p. 213; Brunn, Denkmaeler, No. 77.

206. Figure of Apollo (?) standing, with the right leg drawn back. The hair is dressed, with the headdress known as the krobylos.

Round the taenia are five drilled holes, indicating that a wreath of bronze was attached. The arms, and the legs from the knees are wanting.

This figure, commonly known as the Strangford Apollo, is referred by Brunn to the school of Callon of Aegina.

From the collection of Viscount Strangford. Stated in 1864 to be from Lemnos, but said also to have been found in Anaphè (Newton, Essays, p. 81).

Marble; height, 3 feet 4 inches. Mon. dell' Inst., IX., pl. 41; Annali dell' Inst., 1872, p. 181; Brunn, Ber. d. k. bayer. Akad. Phil.-hist. Classe, 1872, p. 529; Overbeck, Gr. Plast., 3rd ed., I., p. 181, fig. 40; Murray, I., pl. 2; Rayet et Thomas, Milet et le Golfe Latmique, pl. 28; Brunn, Denkmaeler, No. 51; Wolters, No. 89; Arch. Zeit., 1864, p. 164*.