Eleven pieces comprising two non-joining fragments. To Young's publication of six pieces are now added five more, two of which help to complete to inscription.
Part of the side wall with reserved panel ... 600 B.C ... Line 1: Ανδρογ[---] ho Δ[..]ιες
Line 2: τοι Δι τ΄άναχτι hισ-
Line 3: έδρασεν
Line 1 contains a proper name, Androg ... , followed by a patronymic or an ethnic. ... Hemberg shows that Apollo receives the title Anax in Homer and Classical literature far more often than any other deity, and since, like Zeus, Apollo was worshipped on Mount Hymettos (Pausanias, I, 32,2), it is possible that the inscription is a dedication to both deities.
Line 2 breaks off with hισ[---]which suggests a form of ίστημι,although the present tense would be odd.
Line 3 continues boustophedon from line 2 and preserves only one word,έδρασεν.