[761]. From Lucian’s Asinus we gather that knee wrestling (τὰ ἀπὸ γονάτων) was systematically taught in the palaestra. Cp. Aristoph. Pax, 895.
[762]. Legg. 795, 834.
[763]. Nem. iii. 29; Isthm. v. 60.
[764]. J.H.S. xxv. 30, xxvi. 19.
[765]. Aeth. x. 31, 32.
[766]. Phil. Im. ii. 6; Paus. viii. 40, 2.
[767]. Many of them are discussed in my articles in the J.H.S. xxv., xxvi. Cp. Grasberger, 349-374; Krause, 400-438, 534-556.
[768]. B.S.A. xiii. pp. 174 ff.
[769]. The four-horse chariot occurs on coins of Agrigentum, Camarina, Catana, Eryx, Gela, Himera, Leontini, Panormus, Segesta, Syracuse; the two-horse chariot on coins of Messana; the mule car on coins of Rhegium and Messana; numerous riding types on coins of Tarentum. In the early coinage of Syracuse the tetradrachm bears a four-horse chariot, the didrachm a horseman leading another horse, the drachma a horseman, and the obol a chariot-wheel. Vide Hill, Coins of Sicily, pp. 43-46 and passim.
[770]. Gerh. A.V. 267.