84 
E005I VI. 
AKnouniEs. 
BOOM VII. 
the front of a sepulchral cippus. It records the 
name of Claudia Tychen. 
No. 97- A statue 3 feet 10 inches high, ending 
from the waist downwards in a terminus. In the 
right hand is a bunch of grapes, at which a bird, 
held under the left arm, is pecking. 
No. 98. A votive altar, with a dedicatory in¬ 
scription to Bona Dea Annianensis. 
No. 99* A head of Jupiter Serapis. The paint 
with which the face was anciently coloured, is still 
discernible 
Nos. 100, 101 Two bas-reliefs from Persepolis, 
Presented , in 1817, by the Earl of Aberdeen. 
SEVENTH ROOM. 
ROMAN ANTIQUITIES . 
No. 1. An unknown statue; it is clothed in the 
Roman toga. 
No. 2. A bust of a sleeping child, in alto-relievo. 
No. 3. A fragment of a frieze, representing two 
Cupids running a race, in cars drawn by dogs ; 
they appear to have just started from the carceres 
of a circus. 
No. 4. A pig of lead, with the name of the Em¬ 
peror Domitian inscribed upon it. It weighs 154 
pounds. It was discovered, in the year 1781, 
under ground, on Hayshaw Moor, in the manor of 
Dacre, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Be¬ 
queathed by Sir John Ingilby, Bart. 
No. 5. Ditto, inscribed with the name of L. 
Aruconius Verecundus. It weighs 81 pounds. 
It 
