ROOM VI. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM VII. 
Antiquities. 
No. 63. A Greek sepulchral monument, with a 
bas-relief, and an inscription to Exacestes and Metra 
his wife. 
No. 64. The front of a votive altar, with an inscrip¬ 
tion for the safe return of Septimius Severus and his 
family from some expedition. The parts in the in¬ 
scription which are erased contained the name of Geta, 
which, by a severe edict of Caracalla, was ordered to 
be erased from every inscription throughout the Roman 
empire. 
Upon it, a small statue of a Muse, sitting on a rock 
and playing on a lyre. 
No. 65. A head of Domitia. 
No. 66. A statue three feet ten 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. 67. A votive altar, with a dedicatory inscription 
to Bona Dea Annianensis. 
No. 68. A head of Jupiter Serapis. The paint with 
which the face was originally coloured is still dis¬ 
cernible. 
SEVENTH ROOM. 
A pig of lead, with the name of the Emperor Do- 
mitian inscribed upon it. It weighs 154 pounds. It 
was discovered, in the year 1731, under ground, on 
Hayshaw Moor, in the manor of Dacre, in the West 
Riding of Yorkshire. Bequeathed hy Sir John Ingilhy, 
Bart., and presented by his Executors in 1772. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of L. Aru- 
conius Verecundus. It weighs 81 pounds. It was 
found near Matlock Bank, in Derbyshire. Presented , 
in 1797, by Adam Wolley, Esq., and Peter Nightin¬ 
gale, Esq. 
