88 
GALLERY OE ANTIQUITIES. 
[ROOM I. 
on the shield is an inscription to Sallustius Jasius, the adopted child 
of Domitius, a steward of the imperial household, and his wife 
Sallustia. Found at Tusculum , and formerly in the collection of 
Cardinal Passionei, in the Hermitage at Camaldoli. Pt. 10. PI. xlvi. 
Lower Shelf —Bust, probably of Otacilia Severa, the wife of the 
Emperor Philip. From Rome. Pt. 10. PI. xiv. 
Bust of Faustina junior. Pt. 10. PI. x. 
Bust of Domitia, wife of the Emperor Domitian. Found in the Villa 
Casali , upon the Esquiline Hill , 1775. Pt. 10. PI. vm. 
Bust of Oiympias; dedicated to her memory by her freedman Epi- 
thymetus; from the character of the head-dress this bust is probably 
of the time of Trajan. From Edmund Burke's collection. 
Bust of Faustina the younger, wife of the Emperor M. Aurelius. 
Much injured by cleaning. Presented by Peter Ducane , Esq . 
A bust of iElius Caesar. Bequeathed by R. P. Knight , Esq . 
A bust of Augustus. Formerly in the collection of E. Burke. 
Bust of Tiberius. Same . 
Bust of Julius Caesar. 
Underneath. 
A Cippus dedicated to Agria Agatha by P. Ostiensis Thallus and 
Agria Thryphosa, her heirs; on it are represented Galataea, Triton, 
and Cupid; the gryphon of Apollo ; animals and columns. 
Inscription recording the erection of a mausoleum by Tiberius 
Claudius Philetus for himself and his family. 
Lower half of a draped female statue: it rests on a small cippus, 
in front of which, Silenus mounted on a panther, holding a thyrsus, 
and above, two cymbals united by a cord. Pt. 10. PI. lv. fig. 1. 
Female statue draped, the head lost. It rests on a cippus orna- 
mented with wreaths, birds, Sec. 
A colossal toe. 
COMPARTMENT IX. 
Upper Shelf —Front of a sarcophagus, representing the Nine Muses 
in the following order: Clio, ; the muse of history, with a style and 
tablet; Calliope, the muse of epic poetry; Erato, the muse of amatory 
poetry; Melpomene, with the mask and club of tragedy; Euterpe, 
holding the double pipes; Thalia, with the pedum and mask of 
comedy; Terpsichore, wdth the lyre of dancing; Urania, with the 
celestial globe; Polyhymnia, the muse of myths, leaning on her 
column. Its workmanship is as late as the end of the 2nd century, 
a.d. It was obtained by Mr. Townleu from the Villa Montalto. Pt. 
10. PI. XLIV. 
Lower Shelf .—Small bust of Antoninus Pius. 
Unknown bust of a military personage. 
Bust of Caracalla, in the paludamentum and armour. Found in the 
gardens of the nuns at the Quatro Fontane on the Esquiline Hill % at 
Rome . Pt. 10. PI. xn. 
A bust of Gordian the elder, draped in a toga with a peculiar fold 
supposed to have been called the lorum. Pt. 10. PI. xm. 
Bust of a young man of the time of the Antonines, draped in the 
