*208 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM XI. 
Sepulchral monument, with figure of Astarte and Phenician inscrip¬ 
tion of two lines. 
No. 2. Part of a frieze, representing the head of Medusa 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 Paleokastro, 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 monuments 
A portion of a capital of a pilaster. 
Youthful genii contending in a chariot race within the circus. 
Fragment of a sepulchral monument to Eporia. 
No. 4. Blank. 
No. 5. A sepulchral monument to Cassiodorus, inscribed with six 
elegiac verses in Greek. 
The front of a sarcophagus, with a Greek inscription to M. Seim 
pronius Neicocrates. 
A sepulchral monument, representing the deceased seated at a fune¬ 
ral banquet (coena feralis); a veiled female seated near his feet. 
No. 6. Sepulchral monument representing an individual reclining 
on a couch, and another standing. 
Fragment of a bas-relief, representing a battle of Amazons, perhaps 
the death or capture of Penthesilea, from Brysese in Laconia. Pre¬ 
sented 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 Cran- 
non 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 ap¬ 
parently 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 
Agathemotaros. 
Part of a sepulchral monument, representing a funeral banquet. 
No. 8. A sepulchral monument; a husband, wife, and child, pre¬ 
paring 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 monu¬ 
ment, probably of one of the Equites singulares, who fought at the em¬ 
peror’s left hand. 
No. 9. A bas-relief, representing the arms of the Dacians and Sar- 
matians. 
No. 10. A sepulchral monument, representing the Dioscuri stand¬ 
ing, with an altar between them, in a distyle temple. 
A fragment of a frieze, representing two Cupids running a race in 
cars drawn by dogs; they appear to have just started from the carceres 
of a circus. 
