144 
room xv. mensions; it is inscribed with the name of Aris- 
Ant “ties. tides, who was the son of Lysimachus, and a 
native of Estiaea. 
No. 207. A circular altar, brought from the 
island of Delos. It is ornamented with the heads 
of bulls, from which festoons of fruit and flowers 
are suspended. 
No. 308. A part of a Doric entablature, from 
the Propylaea, at Athens. 
No. 309. A Greek inscription, engraved on 
three sides of a piece of marble. The characters 
are extremely ancient, but unfortunately the mar¬ 
ble has been very much mutilated, and the letters 
defaced. 
No. 310. The upper part of the shaft of a 
small Ionic column. 
No. 31L A Greek inscription, engraved on 
two surfaces of a tablet of marble. It is an in¬ 
ventory of articles of gold and silver belonging to 
the Parthenon, and which the quaestors of the 
temple acknowledge that they have reeeived from 
their predecessors. 
No. 312. A piece of the shaft of an Ionic co¬ 
lumn, belonging to the temple of Ereetheus, at 
Athens. 
i 29 oct so 
V , 
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