[184] Ib. p. 177; Fergusson, p. 117.
[185] Flandin, ii. 179.
[186] Ib. p. 187; Fergusson, p. 132.
[187] Flandin, p. 196; Fergusson, p. 176; Ouseley, ii. 239; Niebuhr, ii. 121.
[188] Notwithstanding an escort of irregular horse, Baron de Bode, however, narrowly escaped receiving a volley into his party from the Bakhtiyari, whose impetuosity was only restrained by Mr. Layard, who happened to be among them at the time. Layard, Early Adventures (1894), p. 210.
[189] Flandin, ii, 380-81.
[190] Ib. p. 433.
[191] Flandin, ii. 481.
[192] Ib. i. 489, note.
[193] Some of the plates seem to have appeared in 1848 (J. R. A. S. 1848, ix. 393, note), but the earliest received in the British Museum was in August 1850; others not till September 1851. The plan of the S.E. edifice and the general plan of the ruins were not available for Fergusson up to December 1850. See Fergusson, p. 96, note; p. 132, note.