164 
ROOM XV. 
Antiquities. 
No. £13. A sepulchral stele, in which an 
equestrian figure, with an attendant on foot, is 
represented in bas-relief. Above the figures is 
an inscription, consisting of three verses, of 
which the second is a pentameter, and the two 
others hexameters ; they record the name of 
the deceased, Aristocles, 'who was the son of 
Menon, and a native of Pirmus. 
No. 214. A sepulchrai stele, with a very an¬ 
cient inscription to the memory of Aristophosa 
and others. A peculiarity occurs in this inscrip¬ 
tion, namely, that the letters vo are twice used 
for viov. 
No. 215. An amphora. 
No. 216. A Greek inscription, imperfect, 
containing an account of the treasures of some 
temple, probably those of the Parthenon. The 
characters which we see on this marble are of a 
much more modern form than in the inscription 
of the same kind (No. 200) which we have lately 
described. 
No. 217. The upper part of a sepulchral co¬ 
lumn, v>^ith an inscription to the memory of a 
person named Simon, who was the son of Aris- 
tus, and a native of Halse in Attica. 
No. 218. A fragment of a sepulchral stele 
from which the bas-relief has been almost entirely 
broken away; the inscription is to the memory 
of Plieroclea, the daughter of Leucius. 
No. 219. A votive monument with two Greek 
verses, signifying that Horarius had dedicated 
some 
