SALOON.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 1 2.5 
Miletus ; she is seated on a chair in the arch of a fac;ade ; from Athens. 
Presented by the Dilettanti Society , 1785. 
Bas-relief representing three legs from two figures, probably from 
the action part of a group of Theseus killing the Minotaur in the 
Cretan Labyrinth. Bequeathed by Charles Lambert , Esq., 1812. 
Tablet representing a family sacrificing a pig to Pluto reclining on a 
couch, Proserpine in a chair at the foot, and two other divinities, 
probably the Lares, or Penates. 
Sepulchral tablet of Callityche, daughter of Buculus ; on it she is 
represented spinning, attended by a child ; from Crete. From Mr. 
Inwood's Collection. 
Statue of Diana, standing ; the arms and head of the goddess, as 
well as the head of the dog at her side, are wanting. Found at Puz- 
zuoli. Presented by W. R. Hamilton, Esq. 
Greek sepulchral tablet, representing a youth holding a lance, and 
attended by his slave. From the collection of the Earl of Belmore. 
Sepulchral tablet, on it a female draped and seated ; below is the 
word M02. 
Race of Cupids, drawn by chariots of two dogs, as if started from 
the carceres of the circus ; from a sarcophagus. 
Small votive tablet ; on it a family offering to Pluto reclining on a 
couch, at the foot of which Proserpine is seated on a chair, and at the 
head Ascalaphus drawing wine from a large vase. 
Bas-relief ; man leading a bull to sacrifice. 
Bas-relief ; festoons of fruit and flowers. 
Greek sepulchral monument of Cassiodorus, inscribed with six lines 
of elegiac Greek verses ; Cassiodorus and a male member of his family 
recline on a couch, while a female is seated on a chair at the foot. 
Part of a sepulchral monument, with the commencement of a name. 
# Sepulchral bas-relief; on it the deceased reclining at a banquet ; his 
wife seated on a chair at the foot of the couch, and two boys, or chil- 
dren, at the side of the couch. 
Small tablet ; on which is rudely blocked out the goddess Astarte, 
and crescent of the moon ; with two lines of Phoenician writing. 
Sepulchral monument of a girl named Abeita, deceased at the age 
of ten years and two months, seated on a chair unrolling a volume ; 
before her is a column with another volume. 
Marsyas tied up to a tree ready to be flayed. Presented by Mr. 
J. Dodd. 
m Side from a sarcophagus ; on it are five of the labours of Hercules : 
viz. Hercules and the Maenalian stag ; Hercules killing Diomed, and the 
horses fed with human flesh ; Hercules and Antiope ; Hercules killing 
Geryon and taking his oxen; Hercules leading Cerberus from Hell. The 
groups on this sarcophagus are represented as statues on pedestals, in a 
fa 9 ade of Corinthian columns with twisted shafts ; of the decadence of 
the Roman empire ; from Athens. Presented by the Executors of O. 
S. Brereton, Esq. 
Bas-relief, representing the lectisternium of iEsculapius, who re- 
clines on a couch holding a patera ; the left hand of Hygeia or Salus, 
who was seated at the foot of the couch, still remains ; apd a serpent 
rises and eats at the table. 
Part of a votive tablet in bas-relief ; on it is Hercules standing with 
a club, and the remains of the word “ vow,” in the Doric dialect. 
