[ 86 3 ] 
juft to remark, that both the denarii of C. Papins 
Mutilus and the piece by me attributed to our Vetu- 
rius (34.) were coined, in commemoration of the al- 
liance entered into by the Italian ftates againft the Ro- 
mans, about the time of the commencement of the 
Social war ; whereas the Roman medal of Ti. Vetu- 
rius (35), according to Mr. Havercamp, was probably 
ftruck after the conclusion of that war, and even after 
the admiflion of the Italian allies into the city, the 
memory of which it was perhaps intended to perpe- 
tuate, by the Romans. 
That the Etrufcan pieces here confidered were ftruck 
on occafion of the Italian war, or war of the allies, 
is likewife abundantly clear, from a moft rare Etruf- 
can medal in Lord (36) Pembroke’s noble collection, 
never hitherto explained. It is adorned with Such a 
laureated head as occurs on Veturius’s coin, and on 
the reverfe a bull goring with one of his horns a fu- 
rious wild beaft, refembling a monftrous dog, he had 
got under him, together with the Etrufcan infcription, 
vTRamke sIitvhi iruwn >, c. paapi 
MVTIL EMBRATVR, though very indifferently 
copied. This is a fourth Etrufcan, or Samnite, coin 
of C. Papius Mutilus, the Samnite general 3 which 
Sig. Annibale degli Abati Olivieri had neither feen 
nor heard of, when he publifhed thofe two learned 
differtations, which this paper is intended to render 
a little more complete. The bull on Lord Pembroke’s 
medal undoubtedly denoted the ftates of Italy, or rather 
(34) Sag. di DiJJ'erta%. Accadtmich. (Ac. Tom. II. p. 65—71. 
h Tom. I VC p. 140 — 148. 
( 35 ) Sig. Havercamp. Comment, in Famil. Roman, num. omn. 
(S'e. p. 438, 439, 440. 
(36) Numifm. Antiqu. (Ac. Thom. Pembroch, et Mont. Go- 
meric. Com. P. 2. T. 87. num. 10. 
the 
