Page 21, note 1, for C.I.G. read the Roman inscription I.G.
Page 26, l. 25, for It was doubtless.... But they must read It is therefore possible that it was at this festival that comic contests were first regularly organized. If so, they must
Page 27, note 1, add: Wilhelm, however (p. 123), does not believe that the first extant column of 977d was preceded by a lost column; and if he is right, the list of victorious poets at the Lenaea only takes us back at most to about 450 B.C. The question turns partly on the reconstruction of the original heading of this part of the inscription; it must, I think, be regarded as still an open one, and with it, the question of the date of the first comic contests at the Lenaea.
Page 41, note 3, for xx. read iv.
Page 48, note 4, add: According to Wilhelm, p. 257, Körte has proved that the Νῖκαι of Aristotle is the direct source, not of C. I. A. ii. 971, but only of C. I. A. ii. 977. I have not yet been able to obtain Körte’s paper: but I see no reason to doubt that 971 also has an Aristotelian basis, even if that basis be not the Νῖκαι.
Page 51, note 2, add: Menander also ἐδίδαξε πρῶτον ἔφηβος ὤν (Anon. de Com.: Kaibel, Com. Fr. p. 9).
Page 54, note 5, add: [Capps, however, points out (Amer. Journ. Arch. iv. p. 85) that Plutarch does not date precisely Nicanor’s acceptance of the office: and that C. I. A. iv. 2. 584 b mentions choregi in the year 317-316.]
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