ROOM I.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 87 
Upper Shelf —A bas-relief representing the arms of the Dacians and 
Sarmatians. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a ihensa , 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. PL xlviii. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing Achilles detected by 
Ulysses and Diomedes, when disguised as a female, among the daugh¬ 
ters of Lycomedes. 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. PL L. 
Front of Third Pilaster . — Cupid bending his bow; one of the 
copies of the celebrated statue by Praxiteles. Pt. 10. PL xxi. 
Cippus dedicated to Agria Agatha by P. Ostiensis Thallus and 
Agria Thryphosa, her heirs; on it Galatsea, Triton, and Cupid; the 
gryphon of Apollo ; animals and columns. 
FOURTH COMPARTMENT. 
Terminal statue of an Hermaphrodite, holding in one hand a bird 
pecking at a bunch of grapes. Found in a marsh near the Lake Nemi , 
1774. Pt. 10. PL xxx. 
Bust of a Child. 
Cippus, dedicated to Fortune by Antonius, a freedman, for the safe 
return of the Emperor L. Septimius Severus, his wife Julia Domna, 
and his sons Caracalla and Geta, whose name has been anciently erased. 
Group of two dogs. Found on the Monte Cagnuolo , 1774. Pt. 10. 
Vignette. 
Front from the lid of the sarcophagus of which the bas-reliefs are in 
Compartment II., Upper Shelf: it represents Satyrs and cattle. Pt. 
10. PL xl. fig. 1. 
Upon this sarcophagus, 
An Egyptian or Nubian tumbler practising his art upon a tame 
crocodile. From Rome. Pt. 10. PL xxvn. 
Bas-relief, representing a bacchante, holding a knife in her right 
hand, and in her left half a kid supposed to be a copy of the 
XtpoupoQovos, or goat-slaying bacchante, the work of Scopas, who 
flourished about e.c. 360. Pt. 10. PL xxxv. Above which, a 
bust of a child. 
Small statue of Diana, or the threefold Hecate, standing and hold¬ 
ing in her hands a key, snake, sword, and other emblems; dedicated 
by iElius Barbarus, a freedman and bailiff of the Emperors. Formerly 
in the Giustiniani Palace , at Rome. Pt. 10. PL xlt. fig. 1. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing Priam supplicating 
Achilles to deliver to him the corpse of Hector. Pt. 10. PL xl. fig. 2. 
Above this, a bust of Diana. 
Sphinx, which anciently formed part of the base of a candelabrum. 
Pt. 10. PL xxxi. 
Cippus or sepulchral urn, inscribed with the name Pheenariste, 
daughter of Philoponus. 
