SALOON.] GREEK SCULPTURES. 263 
name of Botrychus, son of Euphanus, and a native of 
Heraclea. (278.) 
No. 223. A Greek inscription, imperfect, engraved in 
very small characters: it is an enumeration of the sacred 
dresses which belonged to some temple. (283.) 
No. 224. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing the 
fore-legs and part of the body of a bull. (160.) 
No. 225. Fragment of a Greek inscription; very im¬ 
perfect. (180.) 
No. 226. A fragment of a Greek inscription ; it is the 
latter part of a decree in honour of a person who had de¬ 
served well of some particular city. It is directed, as in 
the inscription No. 203, that the decree shall be engraved 
on marble, and placed in the temple of Neptune and Am- 
phitrite. (230.) 
No. 227. A small figure of Telesphorus, completely en¬ 
veloped in a cloak; it wants the head. (78). 
No. 228. A sepulchral column, with an inscription to 
the memory of Biottus, who was the son of Philoxenus, 
and a native of Diradium. (275.) 
No. 229. A sepulchral stele, with a bas-relief, representing 
a man clothed in a tunic. The inscription over this 
figure records the name of Erasippus, who was the son of 
Callinicus, and a native of CEum in Attica. (212.) 
No. 230. A solid sepulchral urn, with a bas-relief, re¬ 
presenting five figures, executed in a singularly rude style. 
The first of these figures is a boy carrying a large circular 
shield, the second is a warrior joining hands with a third 
person, who is seated before him : the group is completed 
by the introduction of a child, and of a female whose atti¬ 
tude evinces a dejected state of mind. Over the warrior 
is the name of Sosippus, in Greek letters. (239.) 
No. 231. The capital of an Ionic column, from the 
temple of Diana, at Daphne. (80). 
No. 232. The upper part of the shaft of a small Ionic 
column. (310.) 
No. 233. The capital of a Corinthian column. (308*.) 
No. 234. A fragment of a Greek inscription ; it is too 
imperfect to admit of a full explanation, but it seems to 
have been in honour of a person who had distinguished 
himself on some occasion by great humanity. (170.) 
No. 235. A fragment of a decree made by a Society 
