238 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM XI. 
female figure. On the front is a bas-relief, representing 
Penthesilea dragged by the hair from her chariot by 
Achilles armed with a drawn sword. 
A square altar, dedicated by Aur. Thimoteus to 
Diana; the three other sides are decorated with rude 
sculptures. 
No. 30. Bust of iEschines, inscribed with his name, 
from Bitolia in the Ancient Pelagonia. Presented by 
Col. Leake , 1839. 
No. 31. Greek sepulchral monument of Tryphon, 
the son of Eutychus, who is represented standing, 
nearly the size of life, holding in his right hand a strigil, 
and with a garment on his left shoulder, in his left hand 
some undetermined object; in white marble. From Asia 
Minor. 
No. 32. Head, supposed to be that of Homer, from 
Bitolia in the ancient Pelagonia. Presented by Col. 
Leake , 1839. 
No. 33. A monumental inscription, cut from the 
front of a sepulchral cippus, to the memory of Claudia 
Tychen. 
A cinerary urn of marble; on the cover is a recum¬ 
bent female figure; on the front is fx bas-relief, repre¬ 
senting the hunt of the Calydonian boar, Meleager, Ata- 
lanta, &c.; at each end is a vase. 
A sepulchral cippus, with an inscription to T. Clau¬ 
dius Epictetus. 
No. 34. A shelf, containing 
A bust of Hercules. 
A bust, supposed to have been intended for Achilles. 
A bust of a Faun. All bequeathed by the late R. P. 
Knight , Esq . 
Underneath, a sepulchral monument to Sotnikes, who 
is represented standing enveloped in his pallium, with 
his hand to his cheek. 
No. 35. Draped female, wanting the head. 
No. 36* Greek funereal monument of Lenasus, son of 
Artemidorus. 
No. 37* A fragment of a group in alto-relievo; a 
man is seated on a chair, with a female standing near 
him. It is so broken and mutilated that the subject 
cannot be ascertained. 
