ROOM XI.]] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 159 
Fragment of a sepulchral monument to Eporia. 
No. 4. Blank. 
No. 5. A sepulchral monument to Cassiodorus, in¬ 
scribed with six elegiac verses in Greek. 
The front of a sarcophagus, with a Greek inscription 
to M. Sempronius Neicocrates. 
A sepulchral monument, representing the deceased 
seated at a funeral banquet (ccena feralis); a veiled 
female seated near his feet. 
No. 6. Sepulchral monument representing an indi¬ 
vidual reclining on a couch, and another standing. 
Fragment of a bas-relief, representing a battle of 
Amazons, perhaps the death or capture of Penthesi- 
lea, from Bryseae in Laconia. Presented by Col . Leake , 
1839. 
Bas-relief, representing a votive offering of hair to 
Neptune, by Philombrotus and Aphthonetus, sons of 
Deinomachus. Presented by Col. Leake , 1839. 
Bas-relief, representing the lustration of a horse and 
dog, from Crannon in Thessaly. Presented by Col . Leake , 
1839. 
No. 7. A small sepulchral monument, representing a 
veiled female seated. 
A fragment of another, representing part of a female 
procession apparently approaching some deity. 
A bas-relief, representing two men pouring wine into 
a large vessel, and two others attending on a cauldron 
placed upon a fire. 
A sepulchral monument, representing a man fishing, 
inscribed to Agathemetros. 
Part of a sepulchral monument, representing a funeral 
banquet. 
No. 8. A sepulchral monument; a husband, wife, and 
child, preparing to sacrifice to Serapis, reclining at a 
funeral banquet. 
A sepulchral monument; a family of seven persons 
preparing to sacrifice a pig to two Deities, seated at a 
funeral banquet. 
A bas-relief, representing a horse held by a slave ; cut 
from a monument, probably of one of the Equites singu¬ 
lars, who fought at the emperor’s left hand. 
No. 9. A bas-relief representing the arms of the 
Dacians and Sarmatians. 
