GREEK AND ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 69 



VI. — Cast of Greek inscription, relating to the Athenian 

 Conquest of Euboea in 455 B.C., found on the 

 Acropolis of Athens in 1876 (Hicks, Hist. Greek 

 Inscr. No. 28). 

 Presented by the Society of Antiquaries. 



VII.— 1. Marble tablet, inscribed P - SONTI 3 • L 

 • PHILOSTORGVS SORS I LOCO III. 



2= Fragment of Greek inscription. 



3. Fragment of Latin inscription. 



4. Gold finger-ring, with paste intaglio of a spider. 



Presented by H. Martin Gibbs, Esq. 



VIII. — 1. Marble head of lion from a cornice. 



2. Terracotta fragment of antefixal ornament. 



Froni Athens. Presented by Mrs. Cory. 



IX. — Marble fragment of egg-and-dart moulding. 

 Presented by Miss Radford. 



X. — Bronze key attached to ring. 

 From Lapethos, Cyprus. Presented by W. W. Fisher, Esq. 



XI. — 1-20. Twenty terracotta votive figures, representing 

 female deities, worshippers bringing off'er- 

 ings, and musicians playing on the lyre. 

 These terracottas belong to the Graeco- 

 Phoenician period, and, in most instances, 

 are of a primitive kind with bright colours, 

 reds, greens and blacks. 

 Found in 1897 in a cave near Lapethos, in the Kerynia 



district of Cyprus. Presented by H. E. Sir W. F. 



Haynes-Smith, High Commissioner of Cyprus. 



XII. — Thin fragment of silver, with a charm inscribed in 

 late Greek letters. 

 From Caifa. Presented by Miss Constance M. Sivan, M.A. 



XIII. — 1-7. Fragments of primitive pottery, with incised 

 and painted patterns. 



From a First Dynasty tomb at Abydos. Presented by 

 the Egypt Exploration Fund. 



XIV. — 1-25. Fragments of vases of the Mycenaean period, 

 with painted patterns. 



From T ell-el' Amarna. Presented by Prof. W. M. 

 Flinders Petrie. 



A. S. Murray. 



