GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
133 
SALOON.] 
Greek funeral tablet; on it a seated female. From the collection of 
the Karl of Belmore. 
Front of a sarcophagus with an inscription; in the centre is a metrical 
inscription to M. Sempronius Neicocrates, recording that he was 
poet, lyrist, and dealer in female slaves; his portrait, two poets and 
Muses, and a tragic mask, are represented on the sarcophagus. 
Claw; on a pedestal. From the collection of the Earl of Belmore. 
Bust of Minerva, probably from a statue, which the eyes of were 
originally inlaid. The helmet and segis, which are of bronze, are mo¬ 
dern. Found in 1784, in the Villa Casali, in the supposed baths of 
Olympiodorus. 
Sepulchral monument of Exacestes, son of Androbulus, mother of 
Hermippus, and Metre is his wife, who is represented bidding adieu to 
her husband ; each have a child, or slave, at their side ; in the area a 
double cornucopise on a stele, and a censer (thymiaterion) above, two 
crowns, which have been voted by the state. 
Bas-relief, representing two men filling a wine-vessel, and two 
others attending a caldron on a fire. 
Monument, two aged figures on a couch, a boy bringing wine, and a 
man with a horse; from Tarentum. Presented by W. R. Hamilton y 
Esq. 
Small tablet, on which are the words Melanthius Zopyrion; from 
Laconia. From Mr. Inwood's Collection. 
Part of a tablet, with portion of a male, female figure, and attendant 
boy. From Mr. Inwood's Collection. 
Part of a frieze from a temple at Paleokastro, ten miles S. of 
Joannina in Epirus, supposed by some to have been the temple of 
Jupiter at Dodona. Presented by Col. Leake , 1839. 
Sepulchral tablet; seated and standing female and child, all under 
an arch, traces of red colour. Earl of Belmore's Collection. 
Bas-relief, Artemis, or Hecate, with a torch, accompanied by a dog, 
and making the lustration of a horse; from Crannon in Thessaly. 
Presented by Col. Leake , 1839. 
Bas-relief, from a frieze ; Cupid holding up a wreath, in which is a 
Medusa’s head. Obtained by the Euphrates’ expedition. Presented 
by the Board of Control . 
EAS-RELIEFS. 
No. 1. A bas-relief, representing an old Satyr struggling with a 
nymph. Pt. 2. PI. I. 
No. 2. Ditto, representing a candelabrum, formerly in the collec¬ 
tion of the Mattei family. Pt. 2. PI. ii. 
No. 3. Ditto, representing a funeral column, near which is a statue 
of the god of Lampsacus. Pt. 2. PI. in. 
No. 4. Ditto, representing Bacchus received as a guest by Icarius. 
Pt, 2. PI. iv. 
No. 5. Ditto, representing w T arriors consulting the oracle of Apollo. 
It was presented to Mr. Townley bv the Duke of Bedford in 1805. 
Pt. 2. PI. v. 
No. 6. Ditto, in the flat early style of Grecian sculpture. It repre¬ 
sents Castor managing a horse. Found in the ruins of Hadrian’s Villa, 
about the year 1769. Pt. 2. PI. vi. 
