684
INDEX.
DIO
Pantheon of Agrippa at Rome, 579 ; extant
copies of his works, ib. ; his Caryatid, 593 ;
Pliny's notice of, ib.
Dionysius, Argive artist (circ. B.C. 470), made
statue of a horse with its driver offered at
Olympia, 90/ See Glaucus
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, on the style of
Isocrates and Lysias, 166; on the style of
Callimachus ' the diluter of art,' 339
Dionysus, reliefs and statues of: Dionysus
and Seniele, relief of, 73/; pillar of, at
Thebes, 17 ; chair of the priests of, 149;
on the Parthenon frieze, 293 ; changing
types of, 435 ff; bust and torso of, at Rome
and Naples, 436 ; the satyrs, 437 ; Spenser
on, 437 «
Dionysus and the Tyrrhenian pirates, 474/"
Dionysus and Icarius (Brit. Mus.), 435
Dioscuri, the, symbol of at Sparta, 17
Dipcenus and Scyllis. Cretan artists {circ. B.C.
558), pupils of Daedalus, 50/; Moses
Chorene's and Cedrenus' notices of, 51 ;
wide diffusion of their works, tb. ; school of,
ib. ; statue of Apollo by, 59
Discobolus, archaic relief of at Athens, 98f;
Myron's, 158/; in the Villa Massimi, 159 ;
Naucydes', 362
Dontas and Dorycleidas (circ. B.C. 550), made
a chryselephantine group of Heracles and the
River-god Achelous, 52
Dorycleidas, figure of Th(tnis by, 53- Stt
Dontas
Dress, Greek, in the age of Pericles, 8/
EGYPT, names of the gods learned from,
by the Pelasgi, 16; art in, under the
Ptolemies, 514/; early Greek and Roman
contempt for the superstitions of, 667 ;
deities of kr.own to the Greeks, ib. ; Roman
statues of /sis, 668 f; of JJoms, 6C9 :
Sarapis, ib. ; Anubis, 670
Eircnt and Plutus (Munich), 375
Eleusinian Deities, relief of, 301 f
Eleusinian mysteries, initiation in of Deme-
trius Poliorcetes, 511
Elgin, Lord, brings the Parthenon marbles to
England, 249 ; enthusiasm of the art world
and opinions on his proceeding, 249/, 253 ;
denounced by Lord Byron, 250
Elis, art school of, 91. See Pheidias. Olympia
EUN
Endceus of Athens (circ. B.C. 500), contem-
porary of Daedalus, 53 f; archaic works
of:—a xoanon of Athene in the Acropolis,
a colossal wooden statue of Athtni Polias,
and an ivory statue of Athtni Alca, trans-
ferred to Rome by Augustus, 54, 572; also
an image of the Ephcsian Artemis, 54 ;
primitive character of his works, 94/
Rndytnion, extant figures of, 3SS n
Entelidas, of Argos, sculptor of Olympian
victors, 88
Epaminondas, statues of in Messene, 497
Epeius of Phocis, reputed author of the
'Trojan Horse,' 21, 88
Ephesus, archaic goddess of, 390 ; first temple
of Artemis at, 391. Set Artemision
Epictetus, on the Olympian Zeus, 195
Erechtheium, the, 182 ; design and building
of, 314 ; sanctity of its position; 314 f;
restored elevation of, 315 ; frieze of, 31S/;
prices of the figures on the frieze, 319;
candelabra of Callimachus, 339
Erechthonian serpent, the, 184 n
Ergotimus, archaic vase of, 21. See Clitias
Erinna the poetess, 363 n; sculptured by
Naucydes of Argos, ib.
Krinnycs, the, of Scopas, 3S0
Eros of Ccntoce/le, the, 449
Eros in Thespia, of Praxiteles, ancient repute
of, 448; removed to Rome by Caligula, ib.;
examination of, 448 /; extant woiks of a
similar kind, 449 f
Esguitint Venus, account of, 623/
Etruria, deities of cities of, 633
Etruscan art, comparison of with that of the
Attic school, 109; works of, 567 ff; bor-
rowed from the East and from Magna
Gra;cia, 568; classic notices of, 569 n ;
the cista mystica, 570/
Etruscans, sources of information as to, 566 n ;
character and peculiarities of, 568/
Eucleides of Alliens, a debtor of Plato's, 377 ;
made statues of Zeus and other gods, ib.
Kumelus the poet, 40
Eumencs I. of Pergamon, 534
Ennenei 11. of Pergaxnoxi, his victory over
the Gauls, 543 ; rewarded by the Romans
as their friend, ;'/'
Emu mus of Locii, winner of the mimical
piize by help of a cicada, 497
INDEX.
DIO
Pantheon of Agrippa at Rome, 579 ; extant
copies of his works, ib. ; his Caryatid, 593 ;
Pliny's notice of, ib.
Dionysius, Argive artist (circ. B.C. 470), made
statue of a horse with its driver offered at
Olympia, 90/ See Glaucus
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, on the style of
Isocrates and Lysias, 166; on the style of
Callimachus ' the diluter of art,' 339
Dionysus, reliefs and statues of: Dionysus
and Seniele, relief of, 73/; pillar of, at
Thebes, 17 ; chair of the priests of, 149;
on the Parthenon frieze, 293 ; changing
types of, 435 ff; bust and torso of, at Rome
and Naples, 436 ; the satyrs, 437 ; Spenser
on, 437 «
Dionysus and the Tyrrhenian pirates, 474/"
Dionysus and Icarius (Brit. Mus.), 435
Dioscuri, the, symbol of at Sparta, 17
Dipcenus and Scyllis. Cretan artists {circ. B.C.
558), pupils of Daedalus, 50/; Moses
Chorene's and Cedrenus' notices of, 51 ;
wide diffusion of their works, tb. ; school of,
ib. ; statue of Apollo by, 59
Discobolus, archaic relief of at Athens, 98f;
Myron's, 158/; in the Villa Massimi, 159 ;
Naucydes', 362
Dontas and Dorycleidas (circ. B.C. 550), made
a chryselephantine group of Heracles and the
River-god Achelous, 52
Dorycleidas, figure of Th(tnis by, 53- Stt
Dontas
Dress, Greek, in the age of Pericles, 8/
EGYPT, names of the gods learned from,
by the Pelasgi, 16; art in, under the
Ptolemies, 514/; early Greek and Roman
contempt for the superstitions of, 667 ;
deities of kr.own to the Greeks, ib. ; Roman
statues of /sis, 668 f; of JJoms, 6C9 :
Sarapis, ib. ; Anubis, 670
Eircnt and Plutus (Munich), 375
Eleusinian Deities, relief of, 301 f
Eleusinian mysteries, initiation in of Deme-
trius Poliorcetes, 511
Elgin, Lord, brings the Parthenon marbles to
England, 249 ; enthusiasm of the art world
and opinions on his proceeding, 249/, 253 ;
denounced by Lord Byron, 250
Elis, art school of, 91. See Pheidias. Olympia
EUN
Endceus of Athens (circ. B.C. 500), contem-
porary of Daedalus, 53 f; archaic works
of:—a xoanon of Athene in the Acropolis,
a colossal wooden statue of Athtni Polias,
and an ivory statue of Athtni Alca, trans-
ferred to Rome by Augustus, 54, 572; also
an image of the Ephcsian Artemis, 54 ;
primitive character of his works, 94/
Rndytnion, extant figures of, 3SS n
Entelidas, of Argos, sculptor of Olympian
victors, 88
Epaminondas, statues of in Messene, 497
Epeius of Phocis, reputed author of the
'Trojan Horse,' 21, 88
Ephesus, archaic goddess of, 390 ; first temple
of Artemis at, 391. Set Artemision
Epictetus, on the Olympian Zeus, 195
Erechtheium, the, 182 ; design and building
of, 314 ; sanctity of its position; 314 f;
restored elevation of, 315 ; frieze of, 31S/;
prices of the figures on the frieze, 319;
candelabra of Callimachus, 339
Erechthonian serpent, the, 184 n
Ergotimus, archaic vase of, 21. See Clitias
Erinna the poetess, 363 n; sculptured by
Naucydes of Argos, ib.
Krinnycs, the, of Scopas, 3S0
Eros of Ccntoce/le, the, 449
Eros in Thespia, of Praxiteles, ancient repute
of, 448; removed to Rome by Caligula, ib.;
examination of, 448 /; extant woiks of a
similar kind, 449 f
Esguitint Venus, account of, 623/
Etruria, deities of cities of, 633
Etruscan art, comparison of with that of the
Attic school, 109; works of, 567 ff; bor-
rowed from the East and from Magna
Gra;cia, 568; classic notices of, 569 n ;
the cista mystica, 570/
Etruscans, sources of information as to, 566 n ;
character and peculiarities of, 568/
Eucleides of Alliens, a debtor of Plato's, 377 ;
made statues of Zeus and other gods, ib.
Kumelus the poet, 40
Eumencs I. of Pergamon, 534
Ennenei 11. of Pergaxnoxi, his victory over
the Gauls, 543 ; rewarded by the Romans
as their friend, ;'/'
Emu mus of Locii, winner of the mimical
piize by help of a cicada, 497