74 
GR^CO-ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 
[ground 
Julia Sabina, and a young man with a dedicatoiy inscription on the 
pedestal. 
Against the pilaster, a statue of Hadrian, in armour. 
Compartment X. — Bust of Antoninus Pius ; head and two busts 
of Marcus Aurelius, the one attired as a Frater Arvalis) busts of 
Faustina and Lucius Verus when young. 
Against the pilaster, a statue of Hadrian, found at Cyrene, in civil 
costume. 
Compartment XI. — Busts of Lucius Verus and Lucilla ; head of 
Commodus ; and busts of Crispina, Pertinax, and Septimius 
Severus. 
Against the pilaster, an unknown Iconic female figure, found at 
Cyrene, probably of the time of Hadrian. 
Compartment XIL — Busts of Caracalla, Julia Mamsea, Gordia- 
nus I., Sabinia Tranquillina, Otacilia Severa (wife of the Emperor 
Philip the Elder), lower half of a statue of Lucius Verus, found at 
Ephesus, and head of Herennia Etruscilla. 
On shelves above this row of busts is a series of heads and 
busts, mostly portraits, beginning at the west-end of the room, with 
portraits of celebrated Greeks. 
FIEST GR^CO-ROMAN ROOM. 
This and the two succeeding rooms are, for the most part, 
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 indirectly, to the Greek schools of sculpture. 
Some few of these may, perhaps, be original monuments of 
the autonomous or prse-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. 
Along the sides of the room, commencing from the North- 
west angle, are the following statues and heads : — 
North Side. — A head of Minerva. Against the western column 
are a Canephora and a small seated figure of Pluto or Hades, with 
whose attributes those of Jupiter are here combined. At the back 
of the same column is a bust of Minerva, with drapery and helmet 
restored in bronze, and at the back of the eastern column a statue 
of IJecate, or the Diana Triformis, with a Latin inscription record- 
ing the name of the person who dedicated it. Against the Eastern 
column are a statue of Apollo, from the Farnese Palace, and a bust 
