112 
LYCIAN SALOON. 
Small torso of Venus, draped below the waist, in Parian marble, of 1 
good workmanship. 
Fragment of the left side of a female head, bound with a sphendone. 
Left elbow of a female statue. This and the preceding, which are 
both of small-life-size, in Parian marble, of archaic but good'work¬ 
manship, were found, with numbers 28 and 29, built into the walls of 
the Acropolis. 
Portions of leaden and iron cramps; found inserted in the earlier 
sculptures of the Acropolis. 
Three small vases, a broad-rimmed cup, and four small lamps, in 
terracotta. 
Twenty-five small fragments of glass vessels. 
Lower portion of a small bowl of embossed red ware. 
Small fragment of a vase of so-called Samian ware, stamped with a 
cross, of the Byzantine period. 
Fragment from the bottom of a cup, of the same vrare. 
Two fragments from the side of a painted cup. 
Six fragments of vases, with fine black glazing, in the style of Nola. 
Fragment of the lip of a large crater, red, with an ivy wreath painted 
in black. 
Small bronze tripodial vessel, one foot resembling a duck’s head. 
Bronze handle of a jug. 
Leaden grating for the drain pipe numbered 184. 
Fragment of a leaden pipe. 
Handle of a terracotta amphora, stamped wdth a circular band, in¬ 
scribed, in the Doric dialect, with the name of Hippocrates (an 
eponymous magistrate of Rhodes), and inclosing a rose, in low relief. 
Similar handle, with an oblong stamp, exhibiting a small caduceus, 
and the name of the magistrate Himas. 
Small votive human foot, and part of the leg, in marble, of rud"' 
workmanship. 
Various fragments of painted cement; from the walls of early Christian 
edifices. 
The preceding objects were all found in excavating the base of the 
monument numbered 34 et seq. 
m 
^The following were found in the houses overwhelmed by the fall of 
the monument: — 
Five round flat pieces of terracotta, each perforated with two holes, 
and apparently intended for weights. 
Two sickles, and several hooks, nails, and staples, of iron. 
Small leaden weight. 
Eight small fragments of glass windows. ? 
Small pyramidal block of terracotta, of the kind supposed to have I 
been hung round the necks of cattle. V 
The following w’ere found at Piwara.-— ' ^ 
A mass comprising fragments of human bones, tiles, and cement, 
conglomerated by the deposit of lime filtering from the rock of a tomb. 
Fi'cigment of stucco, with marks of sculpture, used to fill up the 
fissures of the rock of the tombs. 
Fragment of cement, used for the lining of a w^ater cistern. 
