[345]. 920A; cf. above, on exchange.

[346]. 849C.

[347]. Cf. p. [39] and notes.

[348]. Cf. p. [40] and notes.

[349]. 742C.

[350]. Cf. p. [59] and notes.

[351]. 744E. The entire wealth will thus vary from the bare lot to five times its value. Cf. Jowett, Dialogs of Plato, 3d ed., V, 127, though the division into four classes might mean that the highest was only four times the lot value. Espinas (Revue des Etudes Grecques, XXVII [1914], 237) accepts the former interpretation.

[352]. 54D-E. The value of the lot was thus only a mina.

[353]. 744E, 745A.

[354]. 745A, 754D-E (which requires it only for the excess), 755A. Espinas (op. cit., pp. 118 ff.) emphasizes the ascetic tendency of his regulations.