[323] [P. 237.]

[324] [Pl. XLVI.]; C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XXXI. p. 26; Ibid. (1906), Pl. XXXI. A and p. 23. Constantinople Museum, No. 1217.

[325] Hans Rott, Kleinasiatische Denkmäler (Leipzig, 1908), p. 178, fig. 3; Jeraphanion, Proc. S.B.A., xxx. (1908) pp. 43, 44, and Pl. II.

[326] Murray’s Handbook for Asia Minor, p. 273.

[327] Ramsay and Hogarth, Recueil, etc., xiv. p. 81, and Pl. VI.; C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XXX. and p. 25; Chantre, Mission en Cappadoce (Paris, 1898), Pl. XXIII and p. 125.

[328] Hist. Geog., pp. 288, 312. The identification probably remains unshaken by the discovery at Tashji. Cf. Strabo, xii. 2-6. The word seems to involve the name Tark....

[329] [Pl. XLVII.]

[330] Cf. the god-figures of Boghaz-Keui, [Pl. LXV.]

[331] This position is unique; cf. the priest-figures in Pls. [LVIII.], [LXXII.]

[332] Cf. the god-figures of Kara-Bel, [Pl. LIV.]; Malatia, [Pl. XLIV.]