77 
No. 167. A sepulchral solid urn, having three room xv. 
figures in bas-relief on the front. The first of antiquities. 
these is a warrior with a helmet and shield, who is 
joining hands with an elderly man, dressed in a long- 
tunic ; the third figure is a female. The inscrip¬ 
tion underneath these figures probably contained 
the names of the parties, but is too mutilated to 
admit of being deciphered. 
No. 168. A sepulchral column of Menestratus, 
the son of Thoracides, and a native of Corinth. 
No. 169. The upper part of a sepulchral stele, 
having the inscription, as well as the arabesque 
ornament on the summit, perfect. The inscrip¬ 
tion is to the memory of Asclepiodorus the son of 
Thraco, and Epicydes the son of Asclepiodorus; 
both the deceased were natives of Olynthus, a city 
in Macedon. 
No. 170. A fragment of a Greek inscription ; it 
is too imperfect to admit of a full explanation, but 
it seems to have been in honour of a person who ' 
had distinguished himself on some occasion by great 
humanity. 
No. 171. An amphora. 
No. 172. A sepulchral stcde, with a Greek in¬ 
scription, consisting of four lines and a half, part 
of which is written in prose and part in verse. The 
inscription informs us that the monument was 
erected by a mother to the memory of her two 
sons, Diitrephes and ‘Pericles, the former of whom 
was 
