91 
No. 93. Fragments of a Persepolitan In- i- 
scription. Presented^ in 1818, hy the Earl ^Antiquities. 
Aberdeen, 
SECOND ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A colossal head of Minerva. Pt. 1. room ii. 
PI, I, Antiquities. 
No. 2. A funeral urn, ornamented with eques¬ 
trian and pedestrian combatants. Pt. 1. PI. ii. 
No. 3. One of the feet or supports of an 
ancient tripod table. Pt. 1. PI. iii. 
No. 4. A statue of Cupid bending his bow. 
Purchased^ in 1812 , at the sale of the late Right 
Hon, Edmund Burke*s Marbles, 
No. 5. A fragment of one of the three sup¬ 
ports of a tripod bason, composed of the head 
and neck of a lion. On the forehead are the 
horns of a goat. Pt. 1. PI. xiii. 
No. 6. The capital or upper division of a 
votive cippus. Pt. 1. PI. xiv. 
No. 7. The key-stone of a triumphal arch, 
ornamented with a figure of Victory elaborately 
hollowed out between the two volutes. This 
fragment is inserted in a modern pedestal. Pt. 
1. PI. XV. 
No. 8. A statue of a canephora, anciently 
made use of as a column. It was one of the 
Caryatides which supported the portico of a 
small 
