GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
106 
freedmen and slaves on the restoration of their master to health. 
On one side are the rod and snake of iEsculapius and sacrificial in- 
struments. On the other are the cornucopise and rudder of Fortune, 
a patera and jug. Found near the Watergate , Chester, in 1779; 
presented by Sir Ph. de Maly as Grey Egerton, Bart . 
A has relief of a Roman standard of the second legion, between 
Pegasus and Capricorn ; underneath is the inscription leg. ii. aug. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Domitian 
when he was consul for the eighth time, a.d. 82, weighing 154 lbs. 
It was discovered in 1731 under ground, on Hayshaw Moor, in 
the West Riding of Yorkshire, half-way between an ancient lead 
mine, north of Pateley Bridge, and the Roman road from Ilkley, 
Olicana, to Aldborough, Isurium. Bequeathed by Sir J . Ingleby , 
Bart., and presented by his executors, 1772. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Hadrian, 
weighing 191 lbs. ; found in 1796 or 1797, at Snailbeach Farm, 
Parish of Westbury, 10 miles s. w. of Shrewsbury. Presented by J . 
Lloyd, Esq., 1798. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Hadrian, 
weighing 125 lbs. Found on Cromford Moor, in Derbyshire. Pre- 
sented, in 1797, by A. Woolley and P. Nightingale, Esqs . 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of L. Aruconius Verecundus, 
and the letters metal lvtvjd, probably the mine of Lutudai. Found 
near Matlock Bank, in Derbyshire. Presented by A. Woolley and 
P. Nightingale, Esqs. 
A pig of lead, inscribed cl . tr . lvt . er . ex*, arg, found with 
three other pigs, and some broken Roman pottery, at Broomer’s 
Hill, in the parish of Pulborough, Sussex, January 31, 1824, close to 
the Roman road, Stone Street, from London to Chichester. For a 
pig of lead with a similar inscription, found on Matlock Moor, Derby- 
shire, see Archaeologia, ix. p. 45. Presented by the Earl of Egremont, 
July 10, 1824. 
An altar with a Greek inscription, dedicated by Diodora, a high 
priestess to the Tyrian Hercules; on one side is a bull’s head, on 
the other a sacrificing knife, and crown. Found at Corbridge, 
Northumberland. Presented by the Duke of Northumberland , in 
1774. 
LYCIAN ROOM. 
The Sculptures in this Room consist of the remains of ancient cities 
in Lycia, one of the south-west provinces of Asia Minor, inhabited by 
a mixed population of an aboriginal race called Solymi and Termilse, 
and by the Greeks, who had colonised it at an early period before the 
epoch of the Trojan war. These monuments were removed from 
that country by two expeditions undertaken by her Majesty’s govern- 
ment in the years 1842 — 1846, under the directions of Sir C. Fellows, 
by whom the greater part of them were discovered. They consist of 
sculptured remains, ranging in date from the subjugation of the country 
by the Persians, b.c. 545, to the period of the Byzantine Empire. 
With them are exhibited some plaster casts of certain other sculptures, 
