188 
ROOM XI. to Diana; the three other sides are decorated with rude 
Antiquities, sculptures. 
Upon this a circular vase, or capital of a sepulchral cip- 
pus, decorated with foliage and the symbolical serpent. 
No. 41. A Greek funeral monument, with a bas- 
relief and an inscription. It is to the memory of a 
person named Alexander, a native of Bithynia. This 
marble, brought from Smyrna, was presented to the Mu¬ 
seum, in 1772, by Matthew Duane, Esq., and Thomas Tyr- 
whitt, Esq . 
No. 42. A terminal statue of a Faun. 
No. 43. A shelf containing 
An unknown bust of a boy. 
A bust of ./Elius Caesar. 
An unknown bust. All bequeathed by the late R. P. 
Knight, Esq, 
Underneath, a sun-dial. Purchased in 1821. 
No. 44. Blank. 
No. 45. A Mithraic group. 
No. 46. Blank. 
No. 47. The front of a tomb, from Delos. Formerly 
belonging to Col. Rooke, and presented, in 1825, by A . 
E. Impey , Esq . 
No. 48. Blank. 
No. 49. A recumbent female, resting her left arm 
upon an urn: her head encircled by a diadem. 
No. 50. Blank. 
No. 51. A shelf containing 
A head of Tiberius. 
A bust, inscribed to the memory of Cl. Olympius, 
by Epithymetas, her freed-man. 
A head of Augustus. All purchased, in 1812, at the 
sale of the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke's Marbles . 
A Greek inscription, originally placed under a statue 
of Jupiter Urius, which stood within a temple erected 
to that deity at the mouth of the Pontus. Presented, 
in 1809, by Miss Mead. 
Underneath, a bas-relief, representing the goddess 
Luna surrounded by the signs of the zodiac. Presented , 
in 1818, by Col. de Bosset. 
No. 52. 
