[82] Cat. E, 695

[83] Such as Müller und Wieseler, Denkmäler der alten Kunst, see e.g. I. plate XLIV (1854 ...); Jane E. Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903), who gives a number of illustrations.

[84] These were sometimes of a lascivious character.

[85] Op. cit. II. 472; see also p. 463.

[86] III. x. 7 (Frazer’s ed.). See further, the interesting notes in Hitzig et Bluemner’s Pausaniae Graeciae Descriptio, I. 766 (1896).

[87] III. p. 320; see also Hitzig et Bluemner, in loc.; Farnell, op. cit. II. 472.

[88] IV. xvi. 9. It recalls the episode of the maidens of Shiloh dancing in honour of Jahwe, Judg. xxi. 19 ff.

[89] Cp. Emmanuel, La Danse Grecque antique (1896); for illustrations see Müller und Wieseler, op. cit. II. 17188 ff.

[90] Ramsay, in the Journal of Hellenic Studies, IV. 36 (1883).

[91] Cp. Reinach, Orpheus, p. 123 (1909): “Les jeunes filles athéniennes, qui célèbrent le culte de l’Artémis-ourse, s’habillent en ourses et se disent des ourses.”