the group of marble statues set up at Delphi by Daochos of Pharsalos
in honor of his ancestors who had won in various athletic contests,
which was discovered by the French excavators there in 1894. We there
mentioned that Preuner found the same metrical inscription which
appeared on the base of the statue of Agias, the best preserved of
the group (Pl. 28 and Fig. 68), in the journal of Stackelberg,[2484]
who had copied it in the early part of the nineteenth century from
a base in Pharsalos which has since disappeared. This Thessalian
inscription contained the additional words that Lysippos of Sikyon was
the sculptor. In both inscriptions the victories of Agias at Olympia
and elsewhere are noted. Thus we know of two statues of Agias, one at
Delphi, the other at Pharsalos, both presumably by Lysippos. Preuner
also thinks that a third statue may have stood in Olympia.