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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
When writing about the Atalanta of Tegea in the earlier part of this volume (pp. 169 sqq.), I stated my impression that I was not the first to have made the observations which I there recorded; but I overlooked the fact that Prof. Furtwängler's opinion, which in essential matters accords with mine, had already been published in a footnote to an article by Dr. L. Curtius in the Jahrbuch des K. Deutsch. Inst. xix. p. 79. There is, however, the less to regret since my article has given occasion to some further notes on the subject by Prof. Furtwängler, which he has published in the Sitzungsberichte of the K. Bayer. Akademie, 1896, pp. 383 sqq. I have to thank him for a copy of these notes, which give a fuller account than before of his observations and the inferences to be drawn from them. His visit to Tegea, at which his notes were made, was in March 1904; mine was in April of the same year; and so his observations have the priority, though I had, of course, no knowledge of them either when I examined the sculptures at Tegea, or when I wrote down my results for publication; it is a matter for great satisfaction to find them confirmed by so eminent an authority.
1 The head is also referred to by Dr.Amelung, in the text to Brunn-Bruekmann's, Denkmäler, Nos. 583–584, p. 7, n. 16Google Scholar. More recently an article with some more illustrations Arvanitopoullos, M. has appeared in the Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1906, pp. 37Google Scholarsqq.