114 
ROOM VI. 
Antiquities. 
No. 87. A sepulchral cippus, without any in¬ 
scription. It is richly ornamented on the four 
sides with festoons of fruit. 
No. 88. An Egyptian tumbler, practising his 
art on the back of a tame crocodile. 
No. 89. A sepulchral cippus, with an inscrip¬ 
tion to M. Coelius Superstes. 
No. 90. An unknown bust of a middle-aged 
man. The hair of the head and beard is short 
and bushy; the left shoulder is covered with 
part of tlie chlamys ; the right shoulder and 
breast are uncovered. On the plinth is an in¬ 
scription, signifying that L. jEmilius Fortunatus 
dedicates the bust to his friend. 
No. 91. A Greek sepulchral monument, with 
a bas-relief, and an inscription to Exacestes and 
Metra his wife. 
No. 92. A trophy found on the . plains of 
Marathon. Presented^ in 1802, hy John Walker^ 
Esq. 
No. 93. A sepulchral cippus, with an inscrip¬ 
tion to T. Claudius Epictetus. 
No. 94. A head of Domitia. 
No. 95. A small statue of Jupiter sitting. He 
is represented in his two-fold capacity, as king 
of the upper and lower regions. 
No. 96. A monumental inscription, cut from 
the front of a sepulchral cippus. It records the 
name of Claudia Tychen. 
No. 96*. A head of Demosthenes. Purchased 
in 1818. 
No. 97. 
