[2357] See Chapter [24] of this Book.

[2358] See Chapter [8] of this Book.

[2359] In the Eleventh Region of the City.

[2360] See B. xxxv. cc. [43], [45].

[2361] See B. xvii. c. 1.

[2362] These two artists are invariably mentioned together. Pausanias, B. ii. c. 14, and B. iii. c. 17, speaks or them as the pupils or sons of Dædalus; only intimating thereby, as Sillig thinks, that they were the first sculptors worthy of being associated with the father of artists. Pausanias, B. ii. c. 22, mentions ebony statues by them.

[2363] In the time of the Telchines, before the arrival of Inachus in Argolis.

[2364] Pausanias says that this statue was completed by their pupils. Clemens Alexandrinus mentions other works of theirs.

[2365] Another reading is “Anthermus.” Of many of these sculptors, no further particulars are known.

[2366] Another cause of the quarrel is said to have been the refusal of Bupalus to give his daughter in marriage to Hipponax. This quarrel is referred to in the Greek Anthology, B. iii. Epigr. 26.