96 
room vi. Woodchester in Gloucestershire. Presented by 
Antiquities. Samuel LySOIlS, Esq. 
No. 32. A small statue of Jupiter sitting. 
He is represented in his twofold capacity, asking 
of the upper and lower regions. 
No. 33. A bas-relief, representing Priam in 
the act of supplicating Achilles to deliver to him 
the body of his son Hector. 
No. 33. # A Greek inscription anciently placed 
tinder a statue of Jupiter Urius, which stood 
within a temple erected to that Deity, at the 
mouth of the Pontes. Presented by Miss Mead. 
No. 34. A bust of Severus, with the Imperial 
paludamentum. 
No. 35. A bronze statue of a Roman Empe¬ 
ror, probably of Nero when he was young. The 
figure i§ represented in armour, which is most 
beautifully inlaid. It was found near Barking- 
Hall, in Suffolk, on the estate of the Earl of Ash- 
burnham. Presented in 1813, by the Earl of 
Ashburnham. 
No. 36. A foot covered with a sandal. This 
and No. 30 belonged to the same statue. 
No. 3/. A sarcophagus, in the centre of 
which is the portrait of an elderly mail, placed 
in the inside of a shield, which is supported by 
two Genii. 
No. 38. 
