[13] Daremberg and Saglio, Dictionnaire des Antiquités, s.v. “Etrusci.”
[14] [Figs. 2 and 3] from British School Annual, IX.
[15] [Fig. 4], only a very small fragment of the skirt remains; but the painting has been restored. Reproduced from the British School Annual, VIII., fig. 28.
[16] [Fig. 5] from British School Annual, IX., pl. viii.
[17] The large sash worn over the “Kimono” and tied rather high up at the back.
[18] British School Annual, IX., pls. xi. and xii.
[19] On “fibulæ,” see Sophus Müller, Urgeschichte Europas, p. 95. O. Montelius, Civilization of Sweden in Heathen Times.
[20] British School Annual, IX.
[21] Tournefort, I., 109.
[22] See also, Choiseul-Gouffier, Voyage pittoresque de la Grèce, Paris, 1809, where the women of the islands are represented wearing a tight corslet over a chemisette. A high head-dress, not unlike that of the Petsofa statuettes, was commonly worn by the island women as late as the eighteenth century.