222 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES* [ROOM X1 ' 
A fragment of a sepulchral monument. 
A fragment of a mask of Bacchus. 
A sepulchral monument to a girl, Abeita, deceased at 
the age of ten years and two months, who is represented 
seated, with a dog behind her in a fawning attitude. 
Sepulchral monument, with figure of Astarte and 
Phenician inscription of two lines. 
No. 2. Part of a frieze, representing the head of Me¬ 
dusa in a wreath supported by a Cupid, and the arm of 
another figure. Presented by the Board of Control, 1837. 
Part of a frieze from the ruins of a temple at Paleo- 
kastro, ten miles S. of Joannina in Epirus, supposed to 
have been the temple of Jupiter at Bodona. Presented 
by Col. Leake , 1839. 
No. 3. A man conducting a bull; from a sepulchral 
monument. 
A portion of a capital of a pilaster. 
Youthful genii contending in a chariot race within the 
circus. 
Fragment of a sepulchral monument to Eporia. 
No. 4. Blank. 
No. 5. A sepulchral monument to Cassiodorus, in¬ 
scribed with six elegiac verses in Greek. 
The front of a sarcophagus, with a Greek inscription 
to M. Sempronius Neicocrates. 
A sepulchral monument, representing the deceased 
seated at a funeral banquet (ccena feralis); a veiled 
female seated near his feet. 
No. 6. Sepulchral monument representing an indi¬ 
vidual reclining on a couch, and another standing. 
Fragment of a bas-relief, representing a battle of 
Amazons, perhaps the death or capture of Penthesi- 
lea, from Bryseae in Laconia. Presented by Col . Leake, 
1839. 
Bas-relief, representing a votive offering of hair to 
Neptune, by Philombrotus and Aphthonetus, sons of 
Deinomachus. Presented by Col. Leake , 1839. 
Bas-relief, representing the lustration of a horse and 
dog, from Crannon in Thessaly. Presented by Col . Leake , 
1839. 
No. 7. A small sepulchral monument, representing a 
veiled female seated. 
