[1881]. Louvre G 98; Athens 691 = Ath. Mitth. 1889, pls. 13–4 (Xenokles and Kleisophos); Cab. Pourtalès, 34; Mus. Greg. ii. 81, 1 a.
[1882]. Reinach, ii. 247: see Jahrbuch, 1893, p. 180.
[1883]. Louvre G 25; Mus. Greg. ii. 81, 1 b; Hartwig, Meistersch. pls. 14, 2, 48, and p. 332; Wiener Vorl. viii. 5.
[1884]. See Klein, Euphronios,2 p. 115, for a collected list of examples; also the following notes.
[1885]. Louvre G 30; B.M. E 70 = Fig. [138], E 161, E 454, E 795; Berlin 4221; Naples 822, 965, 972, 2415, S.A. 281.
[1886]. It is worth noting that on the best R.F. vases mortals play the game; on the later ones gods and Satyrs. It must have disappeared from social life about the end of the fifth century.
[1887]. B.M. F 37; Naples 903, S.A. 302, R.C. 144, 145, 2308; Berlin 2416 = Reinach, i. 337; Archaeologia, li. pl. 14; and see Vol. I. p. [452] for a curious variant.
[1888]. B.M. F 50, 175–77; Inghirami, Vasi Fitt. ii. 197.
[1889]. B.M. F 161, F 273, F 275, F 304, F 425; F 579 = Fig. [118] (Eros).
[1890]. Louvre G 30; Mus. Greg. ii. 83, 1b, and 85, 2b.