[407] P., VI, 14.9–10; Hyde, 128 b.
[408] P., VI, 14.11 Hyde, 128 c in Ol. (?) 127 ( = 272 B. C.)
[409] P., VI, 14.12; Hyde, 134 a; erected between Ols. (?) 103 and 115 ( = 368 and 320 B. C.).
[410] P., VI, 16.5; Inschr. v. Ol., 276, 277; Hyde, 154 a.
[411] P., VI, 14.9–10.
[412] P., VI, 15.7; Hyde, 147 b.
[413] P., VI, 15.2; Hyde, 143 a.
[414] VI, 12.5. The date of his victory is unknown, but fell probably in Ol. 134 or 135 ( = 244 or 240 B. C.): Hyde, 105 c and pp. 44–5; Foerster, 463.
[415] He won some time between Ols. (?) 99 and 102 ( = 384 and 372 B. C.): P., VI, 3.2–3; Hyde, 23 and pp. 30–1; Foerster, 335.
[416] On the ancient custom of carrying off votive offerings and images from vanquished foes, see P., VIII, 46.2–4. He shows that Augustus only followed a long-established precedent. Pliny, H. N., XXXIV, 36, in speaking of the great number of statues plundered from Greece by Mummius and the Luculli, quotes G. Licinius Mucianus (three times consul), who died before 77 B. C., to the effect that 73,000 statues were still to be seen at Rhodes in his time, and that supposably as many more were yet to be found in Athens, Olympia, and Delphi.