[444] Letters from Professor Sayce dated Oct. 2, Oct. 9, 1909.
[445] Sayce, Proc. S.B.A. 1905, p. 200; and 1906, p. 94, with Pl. III.
[446] The first five signs on the right of the first column.
[447] C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XXXI., c. and text, p. 27. Ramsay and Hogarth, Recueil, xiv., Pl. I. p. 84.
[448] By a botanist, Herr Walter Siehe, C.I.H. (1906), Pl. LIII. p. 15.
[449] Professor Sayce suggests to us the following translation: ‘This stone was set up by the king, the Prince of Kas.’
[450] C.I.H. (1900), Pl. XXXII. and p. 27; Hogarth and Ramsay, Recueil, xiv. Pl. II. and p. 85; Sayce, Proc. S.B.A. 1905, p. 229. In the Liverpool Institute of Archæology there is an enlarged photo of the original, which has been collated with the cast in the Ashmolean Museum.
[451] See [frontispiece] and [p. 43].
[452] Op cit., p. 230, line 3 and line 5.