K003I VIII.] 
ANTIQUITIES. 
13 
Case 6. 
Di v. A. Portrait of Bion, broken from a bust or statue. 
Portrait, supposed of Diomede, also broken from a statue. 
Mutilated figure of Bacchus. 
Div. B. Aesculapius between two Gryphons. Two 
Aliptes or Anointers ; they have been handles or stands 
for Mirrors. Head of an Amazon. Three heads of 
Ammon; two have been weights, one, part of a vase handle. 
Anubis. Ten figures or heads of Apollo ; the one to the 
right hand, as in the act of bending his bow, being pro¬ 
bably the most excellent specimen of Grecian art existing, 
it was found in 1792 near Janina in Epirus. 
Div. C. Various representations of Bacchus. Among 
them is a remarkable Pantheic Bust, 7^ inches high, of 
very good workmanship; it has goat’s dewlaps,bull’s ears, 
fish issuing from the temples, crab’s claws in the place of 
horns, and the leaves of an aquatic plant forming upon 
every part of the face, neck, and breast. 
Div 3 D. Three heads of Asses, originally decorations 
of seats or beds. Bust of Astarte. Bust and tw T o figures 
of Atis. Various glass Beads. Two Bells. Head and 
two figures of Boars, one decorated for sacrifice, the other 
bearing a mutilated and consequently unascertained female 
figure. Nine representations of Bulls, or parts thereof. 
Div. F. Figure of Castor. Two heads of Gryphons ; 
the larger was probably the handle of some vessel. 
Div. G. Three figures of Beilona. Two Cats, and two 
Pedestals in form of Cats’ heads, decorated with wings. 
A singular Group, consisting of a Centaur between Her¬ 
cules and iEsculapius. Ceres seated. Two Cocks. An 
Upupa sacred to Horus and Harpocrates. 
Di v. H. Twenty figures of Cupid. Eight figures of 
Fauns. 
Div. I. Cybele, the mother of the Gods, bearing, upon 
a crescent supported by the tips of her wings, the busts of 
Saturn, Sol, Luna, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, ar¬ 
ranged according to the days of the w'eek over wdiich they 
respectively preside; over the points of the pinions are 
busts of the Dioscuri, and issuing from a double cornuco¬ 
pia, those of Apollo and Diana. A dead Fawn : the hind 
leg of a Deer; a Doe worried by a Leopard. Five Statues 
