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History of Art in Antiquity. dressed in the same taste. Some wear the fluted tiara, others the rounded cap ; many are bare-headed, with a cord twisted round their head fillet-fashion, like the archers at Susa (Plate XII.). Of the upper row of figures their lower extremities alone remain. Here, behind the doryphores» are horses led by the hand, then a Fig. 193.— PerscpolU. Bu-reUeT on Mfa-atiiictim of hypostvie hall of XcntM. FuutMN and Costs, /W Moonur, Plate LXV. chariot, etc. — details that are conformable to the descriptions which historians have handed down to us of royal processions (Plate IV.). The right wing is not headed by guards. In front of the principal groups are figures which Eastern travellers find no diffi- culty in identifying with those court officers by whom they them- selves were introduced to the presence of the shah. On the bas- Digitized by Google

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