163 
ROOM XII.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 48. Sepulchral monument to Hermodorus, son 
of Aristomenes. 
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. Olympias, by 
Epithymetus, 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 y 
in 1818, by Col. de Bosset. 
No. 52. A very ancient Greek inscription, known by 
the title of the “ Marmor Atheniense.” It relates to a 
survey of some temple at Athens, supposed to be the 
Erechtheium. Brought to England by Dr. Chandler , 
and presented to the British Museum, in 1785, by the 
Dilettanti Society. 
No. 53. Blank. 
No. 54. A large sepulchral cippus, with an inscrip¬ 
tion to Agria Agatha. 
Upon it is a small domestic fountain, used for sacred 
purposes. It is decorated with four flights of steps, and 
four figures of Satyrs and Fauns in bas-relief. 
No. 55. A bronze statue of Apollo. Pt. 3. PL vn. 
Beneath is one of the feet, or supports, of an ancient 
tripod table, executed in porphyry. It represents the 
head and leg of a panther. Pt. 3. PI. viii. 
TWELFTH ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A head of Juno, crowned with a broad in¬ 
dented diadem; placed upon 
