ROOM l.J 
GREEK AN1) ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
89 
Underneath the sarcophagus. —A recumbent statue of Pan. 
Votive toot, entwined with a serpent; probably sacred to Serapis. 
Pt. 10. PI. XL. tig. 5. 
Altar-formed urn of Vipsania Thalassa, freedwoman of M. Vipsa- 
nius Musoeus, and also intended for the ashes of T. Cl. Epictetus, 
an imperial freedman; ornamented with festoons, butterflies, an eagle, 
and other birds. 
Votive foot entwined with a serpent. Pt. 10. PI. XL. fig. 6. 
An eagle in marble. 
Terminal statue of the youthful Mercury, having at his side a 
caduceus, and the bird sacred to him. Found at Frascati, 1770. Pt. 
10. PI. liv. fig. 2. 
Inscription to M. Ulpius Cerdo. 
Front of Ninth Pilaster. — Cupid bending his bow; one of the 
copies of the celebrated statue by Praxiteles. Pt. 10. PI. xxi. 
Cippus dedicated to Agria Agatha by P. Ostiensis Thallus and 
Agria Thrvphosa, her heirs; on it Galatsea, Triton, and Cupid; the 
gryphon of Apollo ; animals and columns. 
COMPARTMENT X. 
Upper Shelf. —A bas-relief representing the arms of the Dacians and 
Sarmatians. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a tensa, or funeral car 
in the shape of a temple, drawn by four horses; on the sides, figures 
of Jupiter and the Dioscuri. Purchased from Vinelli , the sculptor , at 
Rome , in 1773. Pt. 10. PI. xlviii. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing Achilles detected by 
Ulysses and Diomedes, when disguised as a female, among the daugh¬ 
ters of Lvcomedes. Pt. 10. PI. xxxvi. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a marriage in the pre¬ 
sence of Juno Pronuba ; the bridegroom holding the marriage con¬ 
tract, attended by the groomsman. Pt. 10. PI. L. 
Lower Shelf —Bas-relief representing Luna surrounded by the signs 
of the Zodiac. Presented by Col. de Bosset , 1811. 
Candelabrum, with festoons sculptured in alto-relievo. 
Sepulchral bas-relief. 
Fragment of a bas-relief, representing three legs, from a group of 
Theseus destroying the Minotaur. 
Sepulchral tablet, dedicated by Servius Cornelius Diadumenus to 
his wife Cornelia Servanda. 
Centaur carrying off a female. Modern. 
Sun dial, supported by lions’ heads and claws. 
Underneath. —Terminal statue of a satyr. 
Base of a candelabrum, supported by three lion’s claws ; at the sides 
are the gryphon, crow and laurel, tripod and fillet, emblems of the 
Hyperborean Apollo ; surmounted by part of another candelabrum, 
ornamented with festoons, foliage, and birds. Pt, 10. PI. liv. fig. 1. 
Small statue of Neptune; at his side is a dolphin. From Athens. 
Presented by J. S. Gaskoin , Esq. 
Altar inscribed to her husband, M. Clodius Hennas, to her brother 
Felix, and to Tyrannus, by Annia Augusialis. 
