[579]. In Jahrb., 1908, pp. 95 ff., he enumerates Gerh. A. V. 22, Naples 3084, B.M. Vases, E. 256. On the B.M. vase we see a familiar type of a youth preparing to throw a javelin; the vase in Gerh. represents the same type, but left-handed, whether by accident or intention; the Naples vase is equally inconclusive.
[580]. Theb. vi. 679-712.
[581]. Vide Kietz, Diskoswurf, Munich, 1892. Six in Gaz. Archéolog. 1888, 291. Jüthner l.c. Chryssaphis, Bulletin du Comité des Jeux Olympiques 1906, p. 57. Criticisms of these schemes will be found in J.H.S. l.c.
[582]. A full list of the vases and bronzes representing these two types is given in J.H.S. l.c. pp. 14-24.
[583]. J.H.S. l.c. p. 18.
[584]. No. 561.
[585]. No. 7412. Cp. r.-f. amphora, Munich, 374, published in Hoppin’s Euthymidês.
[586]. Philopseud. 18.
[587]. Dr. Jüthner deduces from these vases his theory of the Kreisschwung, an impossible method of throwing the diskos by whirling the arm right round, for a criticism of which vide J.H.S. l.c. p. 33.
[588]. Gerh. A. V. 260, Naples 3084, B. M. Vases, B. 361 (Fig. 77), and a lekythos in Boulogne (J.H.S. l.c. Fig. 22).