226 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [[ROOM XI. 
female figure. On the front is a bas-relief, representing 
Penthesilea dragged by the hair from her chariot by 
Achilles armed with a drawn sword. 
A square altar, dedicated by Aur. Thimoteus to 
Diana; the three other sides are decorated with rude 
sculptures. 
"No. 30. Bust of iEschines, inscribed with his name, 
from Bitolia in the Ancient Pelagonia. Presented by 
Col. Leake , 1839. 
No. 31. Greek sepulchral monument of Tryphon, 
the son of Eutychus, who is represented standing, 
nearly the size of life, holding in his right hand a strigil, 
and with a garment on his left shoulder, in his left hand 
some undetermined object; in white marble. From Asia 
Minor. 
No. 32. Head, supposed to be that of Homer, from 
Bitolia in the ancient Pelagonia. Presented by Col. 
Leake , 1839. 
No. 33. A monumental inscription, cut from the 
front of a sepulchral cippus, to the memory of Claudia 
Tychen. 
A cinerary urn of marble ; on the cover is a recum¬ 
bent female figure; on the front is a bas-relief, repre¬ 
senting the hunt of the Calydonian boar, Meleager, Ata- 
lanta, &c.; at each end is a vase. 
A sepulchral cippus, with an inscription to T. Clau¬ 
dius Epictetus. 
No. 34. A shelf, containing 
A bust of Hercules. t 
A bust, supposed to have been intended for Achilles. 
A bust of a Faun. All bequeathed by the late R . P. 
Knight , Esq . 
Underneath, a sepulchra 1 monument to Sotnikes, who 
is represented standing enveloped in his pallium, with 
his hand to his cheek. 
No. 35. Draped female, wanting the head. 
No. 36. Greek funereal monument of Lenaeus, son of 
Artemidorus. 
No. 37. A fragment of a group in alto-relievo; a 
man is seated on a chair, with a female standing near 
him. It is so broken and mutilated that the subject 
cannot be ascertained. 
