168 
room xv. we ars a high ornament, or tutulus, on her head. 
Antiquities. and s he has a fan, in the shape of an ivy leaf, in 
her left hand. 
No. 239. A solid sepulchral urn, with a bas- 
relief representing five figures, executed in a 
singularly rude style. The first of these figures 
is a boy carrying a large circular shield, the se¬ 
cond is a warrior joining hands with a third per¬ 
son, who is seated before him: the group is 
completed by the introduction of a child, and of 
a female whose attitude evinces a dejected state 
of mind. Over the warrior is the name of So- 
sippus, in Greek letters. 
No. 240. A sepulchral column, inscribed with 
the name of Anaxicrates, an Athenian, the son 
of Dexiochus; beneath the inscription is the 
representation of a sepulchral urn, executed in 
very low relief. 
No. 241. A Greek inscription: it is a prayer 
in behalf of Euphrosynus. 
No. 242. A sepulchral inscription, in six 
elegiac verses, to a young man of the name of 
Plutarchus, who died in Ausonia, at a distance 
from his native country. 
No. 243. An architectural fragment, which 
has formed one of the ornaments of a roof. 
No. 244. A part of a colossal foot, probably 
belonging to a figure in one of the pediments of 
the Parthenon. 
Nos. 245—251. Seven bas-reliefs, of small di¬ 
mensions : they represent various parts of the 
human 
