162 
room xv. No. 306. A sepulchral column, of large dimen- 
Antiquities. s ' ons 5 it is inscribed with the name of Aristides, 
who was the son of Lysimachus, and a native of 
Estisea. 
No. 306*. Part of the capital of an Ionic column. 
No. 307. A circular altar, brought from the 
island of Delos. It is ornamented with the heads 
of bulls, from which festoons of fruit and flowers 
are suspended. 
No. 308. A part of a Doric entablature, from 
the Propvlsea, at Athens. 
No. 309. A Greek inscription engraved on three 
sides of a piece of marble. The characters are 
extremely ancient; but unfortunately the marble 
has been very much mutilated, and the letters 
defaced. 
No. 310. The upper part of the shaft of a small 
Ionic column. 
No. 311. A Greek inscription, engraved on two 
surfaces of a tablet of marble. It is an inven¬ 
tory of articles of gold and silver belonging to the 
Parthenon, and which the quaestors of the temple 
acknowledge that they have received from their 
predecessors. 
No. 312. A piece of the shaft of an Ionic co¬ 
lumn, belonging to the temple of Erectheus, at 
Athens. 
Printed by Rickard and Arthur Taylor , Shot- Lane, 
