according to the narrative inscribed on the freize, in the
hundred and eleventh Olympiad. This little edifice has
suffered nothing from the many causes which have contributed
to lay in ruins the noblest monuments of Athenian taste, but
is still entire, and may perhaps be considered as the most
exquisite and perfect specimen of the order'. It is probable
that the singular building called the temple of the Winds is
not of a date considerably later; it possesses some peculiarities
which are not observable in more recent structures, and
the formation of the roof, while it betrays an ignorance of
the principle of the arch, proves, at the same time, in a
remarkable manner the skill and ingenuity of the architect.
It is mentioned both by Vitruvius and Varro as the work
of Andronicus Cyrrhestes, but without any information
respecting his age?.
Many of the ornamented theatres, so numerous in Asia-
Minor, were built, in all probability, considerably before
the Roman conquest: that at Laodicea on the Lycus, and
that at Patara on the coast of Lycia, are the most remarkable
among those of the Corinthian orders.
The temple of Jupiter Capitolinus at Rome was built by
Domitian, out of the materials of some edifice at Athens
which had been transported from that city ; and this work
is worthy of mention, both because its prior destination is
probably to be referred to the period of which we are
treating, and on account of the remark of Plutarch, who
relates that the columns were cut and repolished after their
1 Stuart’s Athens, vol. i. c. 4.
2 Vitruv. lib. i. c. 6. Varro de Re Rust. l. iii. c. 5.
3 Pococke, vol. ii. Ionian Antiquit. vol. i.