58 
. ..-iX xoor 
ROOJVIXIV 
Antiquities, 
. which the olive tfee'^of Minerva was sheltered, hi 
the templehf Pandrosus, at Athens. 
No. 43. A piece of the shaft of an Ionic column. 
' No. 44. The capital of an Ionic column belong¬ 
ing to the temple of Diana, at Daphne, on the road 
froih^thfehs to Eleusis. 
No.'45. A piece of ^the shaft of an Tonic co- 
lumn^^ b^onging to the same temple. 
‘ 'No. 46. The basehf an Ionic column, likewise 
belonging to the same temple. 
No. 47.^The capital of an Ionic column, from 
the portico of the Erectheuni at Athens. The 
building ^to which this singularly beautiful piece 
.of architecture'belonged, was a doiible temple de- I 
dicated to Alinerva Polias and Pandrosus."' 
Nos.‘48, 49. A'^portion of- the shaft,‘‘and the 
Tase, of the*same column. 
No. 50. A solid monumental iirn/ or cenotaph, 
with a bas-relief in front not inscribed. ‘ 
'"'"No. 51.' Another monumental urn,^of the same 
"kind, inscribed with the matne of PheedimUs of 
Naucratis. ’ 
‘^No. 52-—54. Casts In plaster of three of the nie- 
fopes of the north side of the temple of Theseus, 
at Athens. The first represents Theseus killing 
Creon, king of Thebes ; the second, Theseus over¬ 
coming Cercyon, king of Eleusis, in a wrestling 
match; and the third, Theseus killing the Crom- 
mian sow. 
" ^ No. 55. 
