ROOM I.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 101 
Jupiter Ammon : in front, an ibis destroying a serpent. Formerly in 
the Villa JBurioni , at Home. 
Muse, draped, wearing a sphendone, and holding a lyre in her left 
hand. Terracotta. 
Sepulchral urn in shape of a lecythus ; inscribed Pytharatos and 
Herophylos, whose figures are represented in relief. From the collec- 
tion of Sir Hans Sloane. 
Small cippus, decorated with rams’ heads, festoons, birds, insects, 
and human heads. 
Small cippus, in front, Silenus mounted on a panther, holding a 
thyrsus, and above, two cymbals united by a cord. Pt. 10. PI. lv. 
fig. 1. 
Lower Shelf. — Bas-relief representing Luna surrounded by the signs 
of the Zodiac. Presented by Col. de B asset, 1811. 
Alabaster Etruscan sarcophagus ; on the cover a recumbent female, 
and on the front the hunt of the Caiydonian boar. 
Small statue of a fisherman; on his left arm a bucket. Pt. 10. 
PI. XXVIII. 
Etruscan sarcophagus, in peperino ; on the cover a recumbent 
female ; on the front is Scylla. 
Small statue of a fisherman, in a rough woollen garment, holding a 
basket of fish in his left hand. From Rome. Pt. 10. PI. xxix. 
Small Etruscan sarcophagus in alabaster ; on the cover a recumbent 
female, and on the front is a bas-relief, representing Penthesilea 
dragged from her chariot by Achilles. 
Sun dial, supported by lions’ heads and claws. 
Upper Shelf — A bas-relief representing the arms of the Dacians and 
Sarmatians. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a funeral car in the 
shape of a temple, drawn by four horses; on the sides of the car figures 
of Jupiter and the Dioscuri. Purchased from Vinelli, the sculptor , at 
Rome , in 1773. Pt. 10. PI. xlviii. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing Achilles detected by 
Ulysses and Diomedes, when disguised as a female, among the daugh- 
ters of Lycomedes. Pt. 10. PL xxxvi. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a marriage in the pre- 
sence of Juno Pronuba ; the bridegroom holding the marriage con- 
tract, attended by the groomsman. Pt. 10. PI. L. 
Front of Third Pilaster . — Cupid bending his bow; one of the 
copies of the celebrated statue by Praxiteles. Pt. 10. PI. xxi. 
Cippus dedicated to Agria Agatha by P. Ostiensis Thallus and 
Agria Thryphosa, her heirs ; on it Galatsea, Triton, and Cupid ; the 
gryphon of Apollo ; animals and columns. 
FOURTH COMPARTMENT. 
Terminal statue of an Hermaphrodite, holding in one hand a bird 
pecking at a bunch of grapes. Found in a marsh near the Lake Nemi , 
1774. Pt. 10. PI. XXX. 
Cippus, dedicated to Fortune by Antonius, a freedman, for the safe 
return of the Emperor L. Septimius Severus, his wife Julia Domna, 
