98 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [PHIGALEIAN 
No. 8*. A group of Bacchus and Ampelus. Found a.d. 1772, 
near La Storta, on the road to Florence* about eight miles from Rome. 
A head of Minerva, helmeted. 
A statue of a Satyr, 
A head of Apollo, formerly in the Grimani Palace, at Venice. 
No. 2*. A statue of Apollo, of very early Greek work. Purchased 
in 1818, at the sale of the Comte de Choiseul-Gouffier’s Antiquities. 
No. 11*. A statue of Diana, engaged in the chase. Found in the 
year 1772, near La Storta, at the same spot where the group of Bac¬ 
chus and Ampelus, No. 8*, was discovered. Pt. 3. PL xrr. 
A head of Apollo, of early work. 
No. 33. A statue of a Satyr: the trunk of the tree which supports 
the figure is inscribed with the name of the artist, M. Cossutius Cerdo. 
This statue, with its repetition, No. 43, was found by Mr. Gavin Hamil¬ 
ton in the year 1775, near Civita Lavinia (the ancient Lanuvium), in 
the ruins of the Villa of Antoninus Pius. Pt. 2. PI. xliii. 
No. 9*. A head of the young Hercules. Formerly in the Bar- 
berini Palace. 
A statue of a Discobolus, who is represented in the attitude of throwing 
the discus or quoit, supposed to be a copy in marble of the celebrated 
bronze statue made by the sculptor Myro. Found, in 1791, in the 
grounds of the Conte Fede, in the part of Hadrian’s Villa Tiburtina, 
supposed to have been the pinacotheca, or picture gallery. 
A bust of Minerva, the eyes of which were originally inlaid, from a 
statue. The helmet and segis, which are of bronze, are modem. 
No. 10*. A head, supposed to be of Dione. 
No. 5*. Statue of Thalia, holding the pedum. Found, a.d. 1776, 
in the Maritime Baths of the Emperor Claudius, at Ostia. 
At the ends of the Room are for the present placed— 
A statue of Libera, or of Ariadne, holding a thyrsus over her right 
shoulder, and having a bunch of grapes in her left hand : at her feet is 
a panther. It was found by Mr. Gavin Plamilton at Roma Veechia, a 
few- miles from Rome, on the road to Frascati. 
No. 2. A funeral urn, ornamented with representations of eques¬ 
trian and pedestrian combatants: it was formerly in the collection of 
Victor Amadei, at Rome, whence it was purchased in 1768. Pt. 1. 
PL ii. 
No. 3. One of the feet or supports of an ancient tripod table, 
found in 1769, in the Pantaneila, within the grounds of Hadrian’s 
Villa, near Tivoli. Pt. 1. PL m. 
No. 28. A statue of a nymph of Diana, resting after the fatigues of 
the chase; found in 1766, near the Salarian Gate of Rome, in the 
Villa Verospi, supposed to have been the site of the Gardens of Sallust. 
Pt. 2. Pl. xxyiii. 
A draped statue of a female, without a head. 
Another draped female statue, of the Roman period. 
Two boys (Astragalizontes) quarrelling over the game of knuckle¬ 
bones. Of one figure the arm and hand only are left. One of the 
Astragali may be seen under one of the figures. Found in the Baths 
of Titus. 
No. 43. A small draped female statue, without a head. From 
Sparta. Presented by Colonel Leake , 1838. 
