[313] By Sir Charles W. Wilson; Wright, Empire, etc., p. 57. Ramsay and Hogarth, Recueil, etc., xiv. and Pl. IV. C.I.H., 1900; Pl. XVIII., and p. 15.

[314] Cf. Pls. [LXV.], [LXXI.]

[315] The name means ‘Lion-stone,’ and is familiar wherever such monuments are found.

[316] Ramsay and Hogarth, loc. cit. Pl. II., A.

[317] See below, [p. 297], and Mitt. a. d. Orient. Samm. Sendschirli, iii. (Berlin, 1902), Pl. XLVI. Originals in the Berlin Vorderas. Mus., Nos. 2718, 3001.

[318] Cf. the lions of Marash and Sakje-Geuzi, Pls. [XLII.], [LXXIX.]

[319] Sterrett, Epigraphical Journey (1884), p. 299.

[320] Ramsay and Hogarth, Recueil, etc., xv. p. 30 and Pls. I.-II.

[321] G. de Jeraphanion, Proc. S.B.A., 1908 (Feb.), p. 42 and Pl. I. For the two photographs before us as we write we are indebted to the members of the American Mission at Cæsarea.

[322] Pp. [180], [181].