158 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM XI. 
Case 72. Buckles used by the ancients for different 
purposes. 
Case 73. Handles and other parts of vases. 
Case 74. Ditto. 
Case 75. Specimens of locks and keys. 
Case 76. Spears, knives, and various instruments, in 
iron. 
Case 77. Bits, spurs, and ornaments for harness; 
fragments of chains, &c. 
Case 78. Some articles in bronze, the uses to which 
many of them were applied are unknown. 
Case 107. A bronze statue of a Roman Emperor, 
probably of Nero when he was young. The figure is 
represented in armour, which is most beautifully inlaid. 
It was found near Barking-Hall, in Suffolk, on the estate 
of the Earl of Ashburnham. Presented , in 1813, by the 
Earl of Ashburnham . 
ELEVENTH ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A bas-relief representing Minerva and two 
other deities. Presented by El. Golly Knight, Esq., 1839. 
A fragment of a sepulchral monument. 
A fragment of a mask of Bacchus. 
A sepulchral monument to a girl, Abeita, deceased at 
the age of ten years and two months, who is represented 
seated, with a dog behind her in a fawning attitude. 
Sepulchral monument, with figure of Astarte and 
Phenician inscription of two lines. 
No. 2. Part of a frieze, representing the head of Me¬ 
dusa in a wreath supported by a Cupid, and the arm of 
another figure. Presented by the Board of Control , 1837. 
Part of a frieze from the ruins of a temple at Paleo- 
kastro, ten miles S. of Joannina in Epirus, supposed to 
have been the temple of Jupiter at Dodona. Presented 
by Col . Leake , 1839. 
No. 3. A man conducting a bull; from a sepulchral 
monument. 
A portion of a capital of a pilaster. 
Youthful genii contending in a chariot race within the 
circus. 
