89 
be a treaty between the Athenians and the people room xv. 
of Rhegiuni, a town of the Bruttii, in Italy. AxTi'^^riEs. 
No. 283. A Greek inscription, imperfect, en¬ 
graved in very small characters. It is an enume¬ 
ration of the sacred dresses which belonged to some 
temple. 
No. 284. A fragment of a bas-relief represent¬ 
ing a procession of three figures, the last of which 
carries a large basket on his head; they are ac¬ 
companied by two children. 
No. 285. A sundial, with four different dials re¬ 
presented on as many faces. The inscription im¬ 
ports that it is the work of Phaedrus the son of 
Zoilus, a native of Paeania. From the form of 
the letters of this inscription,' the sundial cannot 
have been made much earlier than the time of the 
Emperor Severus. It was found at Athens. 
No. 28(5. A fragment of a Greek inscription; 
it consists of twenty lines of very ancient charac¬ 
ters, and seems to be a part of a treaty. 
No. 287. A Greek inscription, imperfect. 
No. 288. Ditto, relating to the Erythraeans ; the 
characters are very ancient. 
No. 290. A very ancient Greek inscription which 
has served as an epitaph on the tomb of the Athe- ' 
nian warriors killed at Potidaea. This inscription, 
which originally consisted of twelve elegiac verses, 
has suffered from the injuries of time. 
No. 291. 
