[273] Cf. Baruch, vi. 43. ‘The women having cords around their body sit; and one says ... why was I not chosen and my cord broken?’
[274] Brit. Mus. Guide, p. 27, No. 6; C.I.H. (1902), Pl. XIV., No. 7.
[275] British Museum Guide, p. 27, No. 1, where ‘portion of a building’ is the sum of information available; C.I.H., Pl. IX., and Text, p. 9; Ball, Light from the East, p. 143; Sayce in S.B.A., 1905, Nov., p. 204.
[276] C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XI., 2, and Text, p. 10; British Museum Guide, p. 27, No. 2; Sayce in S.B.A., 1905 (Nov.), p. 206.
[277] Perrot and Chipiez, op. cit., fig. 390. Addendum, 1910: our information about these sculptures is now supplemented by Mr. Hogarth’s account, Liv. Annals of Arch. (Dec. 1909), ii. pp. 165-172, and Pls. XXXV., XXXVI. (i). See also Kellekli in [Appendix B].
[278] Perrot and Chipiez, Art in ... Asia Minor, fig. 391.
[279] Perrot and Chipiez, op. cit., ii. p. 62, fig. 278.
[280] Since published, see [App. B], and Liv. Annals of Arch., ii. pp. 177-183, and Pls. XXXVII.-XL.
[281] Op. cit., fig. 283. First published in Gazette Arch., 1883. Pl. XXII.
[282] Humann and Puchstein, Reisen in Kleinasien und Nord Syrien (Berlin, 1890), Atlas, Pl. XLIX., No. 1-3. Also Messerschmidt, C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XVII., and Text, p. 14.