112 
ROOM Yii. Formerly belonging to Col. Rooke, and p'esented^ 
Antiquities, in 1825, by A. E. Impey, Esq. 
No. 2. A bust of cl sleeping child, in alto- 
relievo. 
No. S. 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* 
No. 4. A pig of lead, with the name of tlie 
Emperor Domitian inscribed upon it. It weighs 
154 pounds. It was discovered, in the year 
1731, under ground, on Hayshaw Moor, in the 
manor of Dacre, in the West Riding of York¬ 
shire. Bequeathed by Sir John Ingilby^ Bart, 
and presented by his Executors in 1772. 
No. 5. Ditto, inscribed with the name of 
L. Aruconius Verecundus. It weighs 81 
pounds. It was found near Matlock Bank, in 
Derbyshire. Rresented.^ in 1797, by Adam 
Wolley^ Esq. and Peter Nightingale, Esq. 
No. 6, A large sepulchral cippus, with an in¬ 
scription to M. Ciodius Henna, Annins Felix, 
and Tyrannus. 
No. 7. Blank, 
No. 8. The front of a sarcophagus, with a 
Greek inscription to M. Sempronius Neico- 
crates. 
No. 9. A pig of lead, with the name of the 
Emperor Hadrian inscribed upon it. It weighs 
191 pounds. It was found in the year 1796, or 
1797, in a farm called Snailbeach, in the parish 
of 
