ROOM I.] 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
85 
COMPARTMENT VI. 
On the wall: portion of a tesselated pavement, representing the 
head of Neptune. From Carthage . Presented, hy Hudson Gurney, 
Esq. 
Underneath, a cistern of preen basalt, originally used as a bath; on 
the sides are carved two rings in imitation of handles. 
Terminal head of Bacchus. 
In the recesses on either side of the door are placed some Greek 
sepulchral tablets, which will shortly be removed. 
COMPARTMENT VII. 
On the Upper Shelf. —Two lions’ heads. Six unknown busts, and 
two bas-reliefs. 
Lower Shelf 
Head, supposed to be one of the Dioscuri, but more probably 
Mercury. Found, near Pome. 
Female head, found near Genzano in 1784. Pt. 10. PI. xvn. 
Bust of Seraph. 
Unknowm head. 
Bust of Roman personage. 
Head of Adonis. 
Head, supposed to be that of Decebalus, found in the Forum of 
Trajan. 
Head of a philosopher. 
Bust of Jupiter. Pt. 10. PI. i. 
Bust of Roman lady. 
Head of a Muse crowned with laurel. From Frascati. Pt. 10. PI. m. 
Underneath. 
No. 80. Terminal head of Bacchus. 
Fortune standing. 
No. 2. A funeral urn, ornamented with equestrian and pedestrian 
combatants: formerly in the collection of Victor Amadei, at Rome ; 
whence it was purchased in 1768. Pt. 1. PI. n. 
No. 12 Bas-relief, representing a bacchante and two satyrs. Dis¬ 
covered at Civita Vecchia, in 1776. 
In the pedestal to this bas-relief are inserted masks. 
A funeral urn, with a snake on the rim. 
No. 45. A statue of Actseon attacked by his dogs. It was found 
by Mr. Gavin Hamilton, in 1774, in the ruins of the villa of Antoninus 
Pius, near Civita Lavinia. Pt. 2. PL xlv. 
Terminal head of Mercury. 
Terminal statue of a female, supposed to represent the Venus Ar- 
chitis of the Syrians. Found, in 1775, about six miles from Tivoli. 
Pt. 2. Pt. xxv. 
In front of Seventh Pilaster. —Colossal head of an unknown per¬ 
sonage. 
Altar dedicated to Silvanus, by Callistus, the farm servant of Caius 
Caslius Heliodorus On it is placed 
A terminal representation of Bacchus and Libera joined back to 
lack. Found by Mr. Gavin Hamilton, in an excavation in the neigh- 
murhood of Rome. Pt. 2. PI. xvn. 
