FLOOK.] 
FIRST GR^ECO-ROMAN ROOM. 
65 
on the pedestal) ; of a lady named Olympias (also bearing a dedi- 
catory inscription) ; and of Antoninus Pius. 
Against the pilaster, statue of Marcus Aurelius, in civil costume. 
Compartment XI. — Busts of Marcus Aurelius (attired as a Frater 
Arvalis) ; of his wife Faustina the Younger; of his colleague in the 
Empire, Lucius Verus ; and of Commodus. 
Against the pilaster, statue of a person in military costume, of 
about the close of the second, or beginning of the third century. 
Compartment XII. — Busts of an unknown person of the period 
of Lucius Verus; of Crispina ; of Septimius Severus ; of Caracalla ; 
of Julia Mamsea ; of Gordianus I. ; and of Otacilia Severa (wife of the 
Emperor Philip). 
FIRST GRJ2CO-ROMAN ROOM. 
This and the two succeeding rooms are appropriated to 
statues, busts, and bas-reliefs, of the mixed class termed 
Grseco-Roman, consisting of works discovered (so far as is 
known) in Italy, but owing their origin and character, either 
directly or mediately, to the Greek schools of sculpture. 
Some few of these may, perhaps, be original monuments of 
the autonomous or ante-Roman period of Greece, afterwards 
transported by the conquerors to their own country, but the 
majority were certainly executed in Italy during the Imperial 
times, though generally by Greek artists, and in many in- 
stances copied, or but slightly varied, from earlier Greek 
models. The description of this room commences from the 
North-West angle. 
Here are a statue of an Athlete, a head of Serapis, and a small 
seated statue of Jupiter, in which are combined the attributes of 
Pluto (Hades), with those proper to Olympus. Between the columns 
which separate this room from the Egyptian room, is an equestrian 
figure restored as the Emperor Caligula, but probably a work of the 
period of Caracalla. 
Along the same side, east of the equestrian figure, is a small triple 
statue of Hecate, or Diana Triformis, with a Latin inscription recording 
the person who dedicated it. 
Against the adjoining pilaster, a statue of Ceres (Demeter), with some 
of the attributes of Isis. 
On the East side of the room are a statue of a dancing Satyr, and a 
Satyr playing with the infant Bacchus. 
On the South side of the room are a statue of Diana, a siatue 
probably of a hero, a statue of Venus, a torso of Venus formerly 
at Richmond House, a head of Mercury, a head of Juno, several 
heads of Apollo and Diann, and a bust of Homer. 
W 
