[193] This feature distinguishes this sign from the determinative of a district, represented as a conical hill.
[194] See for example the groups of symbols accompanying the divine figures at Boghaz-Keui, Pls. [LXV.], [LXII.]
[195] A reading of No. 1 was tentatively put forward by Sayce, Proc. S.B.A. (1903), p. 354; but this must be revised in the light of the new reading of No. 2, and the note on one of the signs of No. 1, in Proc. S.B.A., 1905, Nov., p. 218.
[196] Cf. the Aintab stone below, [p. 107], and [Pl. XLI.] Also the corner-stones in situ at Eyuk, Pls. [LXXII.], [LXXIII.]
[197] These monuments are now to be seen at Constantinople, in the Ottoman Museum. (Nos. 831, 832, etc.)
[198] C.I.H., Pl. III. A, Text, p. 4 (Mitteilungen, etc., 1900, 4, 5), and Proc. S.B.A., v. (1883), p. 146.
[199] By the Liverpool Expedition of 1907. See Liv. Annals of Arch., i. p. 8, Pl. IX., 3; and cf. Proc. S.B.A., June 1908. For three uninscribed but presumably Hittite sculptures from Aleppo, see Liv. Annals, ii. p. 184, and Pl. XLII.
[200] See [Pl. XXXVIII.], to face.
[201] C.I.H. (1900), Pl. VII. and p. 8.
[202] Vorderasiatische Abteilung, No. 3009.