70 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



15. Kylix, red-figure ware, signed by the artist Pamphaios : 

 on the exterior, footraces of armed men, and in the interior, 

 an armed runner. 



16. Vase in the shape of Eros standing among flowers. 



17. Vase in the shape of a Maenad's head, hooded in a 

 panther skin. Black ware. From Rhodes. 



18. Cup, Etruscan hucchero nero, with a frieze representing 

 worshippers bringing offerings to seated figures. 



By Donation. 



I. — 1. Marble statuette of a boy holding a rabbit. Head 

 and right arm wanting. Graeco-Roman. 



2. Marble capital of a Corinthian pilaster, enriched with 

 a group of Leda and the swan. Late Roman. 



Acquired in Greece by the late Admiral Spratt ; 

 and 'presented by Colonel W . Spratt-Bowring , r.e. 

 II. — A series of antiquities from various sites in Crete, 

 found in excavations conducted chiefly by the British School 

 at Athens. 



1. A large number of vases, lamps, and pottery fragments 

 with miscellaneous objects of the Neolithic Age, bone 

 implements and stone vessels, from Palaikastro. 



2. Painted pottery, a lamp and statuette of a bull, from 

 the Dictaean cave. 



3. Primitive pottery and stone objects, from Knossos, 



4. Very primitive votive off'erings in terracotta, from the 

 sanctuary site of Petsofa. 



Presented by the Committee of the 

 British School at Athens. 

 III. — Plasma portrait bust of Agrippina the Elder in the 

 fftyle of the early Empire. [Le Musee, 1905, p. 192, fig. (5 ; 

 Burlington Magazine, 1907, p. 99.) 



Presented by an anonymous donor. 



IV. — 1. Terracotta statuette of a boy seated on a rock, 

 v/ith a dog which leaps up at his side. 



2. Fragment of gold band, stamped with a maeander 

 pattern. 



3. Fragment of ivory carved with a lotus pattern. 



2-3 from a tomb at Corinth. 



4. Fictile vase surmounted by a woman's head. 



5. Terracotta head of a girl wearing a coif. 



4-5 are specimens of modern imitation of the antique. 

 Presented by M. Costis Lembessis. 

 V. Fragment of Arretine M^are, with rivet showing an 

 ancient method of repairing ; the rivet is in the form, of 

 double dovetail. 



Presented by G. A. Simmons, Esq. 



