94 
ROOM III. 
Antiquities. 
No. 34. A terminal head of Epicurus. 
No. 35. A terminal statue of Pan playing upon 
a pipe. 
No. 36. A Greek inscription upon a circular 
shield, containing the names of the Ephebi of 
Athens under Alcamenes, when he held the of-j 
fice of Cosmetes. 
No. 37. A terminal statue, supposed to be that 
of Venus Architis. 
No. 38. A circular votive patera. 
No. 39. An unknown bronze head, supposed 
to be that of Pindar. Bresented^in 1760, by the 
Earl of Exeter. 
No. 40. A circular votive patera, with a head 
of Pan in very high relief. 
No. 40 # . A torso of Hercules. 
No. 41. A Greek sepulchral monument. The 
bas-relief in front represents a trophy, on one 
side of which stands a warrior, and on the other 
a female figure feeding a serpent that is twined 
round the trunk of a tree on which the trophy is 
erected. On the right of these figures is the fore 
part of a horse. An inscription on the top of 
this monument contains a list of names, pro¬ 
bably of those who fell in some engagement. 
Brought to England by Mr. Topham, in 1725, 
and presented to the British Museum , in 1780, by 
the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks , and the Hon. 
A. C. Fraser. 
No. 42. A terminal head of Periander. 
No. 43. A repetition of No. 33. 
No. 44, 
