ROOM I.] 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
89 
toga; inscribed with a dedication by the decemviri stlitibus judicandis. 
Found at Rome, 1776. Pt. 10. PI. xvi. 
Bust of the Emperor Septimius Severus, draped in the paluda- 
mentum. Found in that part of the Palatine Hill now occupied by 
the Villa Magnani. Pt. 10. PI. xi. 
Bust of a man, with features resembling those of iElius Verus; 
on the base is a dedication inscribed by L. AEmilius to his friend. 
Pt. 10. PI. xv. 
Bust of the Emperor Nero. From Athens. Pt. 10. PI. vi. 
Underneath .— Cippus, dedicated to Fortune by Antonius, a freed- 
man, for the safe return of the Emperor L. Septimius Severus, his 
w 7 ife Julia Domna, and his sons Caracalla and Geta, whose name has 
been anciently erased. 
Front from the lid of the sarcophagus of which the bas-reliefs are in 
Compartment xi. Upper Shelf: it represents Satyrs and cattle. Pt. 
10. Pi. XL. fig. 1. 
Upon the Case in which this is inserted, 
Group of tw’o dogs. Found on the Monte Cagnuolo , 1774. Pt. 10. 
Vignette. 
Statue of Cupid bending the bow 7 . Found at Castello di Guido, 
in 1776. 
A bas-relief representing Priam supplicating Achilles to deliver to 
him the body of his son Hector. Pt. 10. PL xl. 
Small bas-relief representing four figures engaged in cooking. 
Terminal head of the young Hercules, crowmed with the leaves of 
the poplar. It was found in 1777 near Gensano. Pt. 2. PI. xlvi. 
Bas-relief, probably part of a candelabrum, representing a Bacchante, 
holding a knife in her right hand, and, in her left, half a kid, supposed 
to be a copy of the or goat-slaying Bacchante, 
the work of Scopas, who flourished about B.c. 360. Pt. 10. PI. 
XXXV. 
Bas-relief representing a Victory pouring a libation to Apollo, who 
appears in his character of Mousagetes. From Sir William Hamilton. 
Sphinx, which anciently formed part of the base of a candelabrum. 
Pt. 10. PI. xxxi. 
Underneath the sarcophagus. —Votive foot, dedicated for a safe 
return, entwined with a serpent; probably sacred to Serapis. Pt. 10. 
PI. xl. fig. 5. 
Altar-formed urn of Vipsania Thalassa, freedwoman of M. Vipsa- 
nius Musseus, and also intended for the ashes of T. Cl. Epictetus, 
an imperial freedman; ornamented w 7 ith festoons, butterflies, an eagle, 
and other birds. 
Votive foot entwined w 7 ith a serpent. Pt. 10. PI. XL. fig. 6. 
An eagle in marble. 
Bust of Hadrian. 
Inscription to M. Ulpius Cerdo. 
Cippus, or sepulchral altar, ornamented w 7 ith rams’ heads and 
sphinxes, erected by L. Virius Helius, to Viria Primitiva, his wife, 
deceased in her nineteenth year. Pt. 10. PI. lvi. 
Against the Pilaster. —A statue of the Emperor Hadrian, of heroic 
size, wearing the paludamentum . Found on the site of Hadrian 1 $ 
Villa , at Tivoli. 
