90 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[ROOM I. 
COMPARTMENT X. 
Upper Shelf. —A bas-relief representing the arms of the Dacians and 
Sarmatians. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a thensa , 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 his friend. Pt. 10. PL L, 
Lower Shelf —Bas-relief representing Luna surrounded by the signs 
of the Zodiac. Presented bp Col de Posset, 1811. 
Candelabrum, with festoons sculptured in alto-relievo. 
Sepulchral bas-relief. 
Fragment of a bas-relief representing three legs, from a group of 
Theseus destroying the Minotaur. 
Sepulchral tablet, dedicated by Servius Cornelius Diadumenus to 
his wife Cornelia Servanda. 
Sun dial, supported by lions’ heads and claws. 
Underneath. —Bust of the Emperor Hadrian, armed, and wearing the 
paludamentum. Found on the site of Hadrian’s Villa , at Tivoli. 
Pt. 10. PL viii. 
Small cippus, decorated with rams’ heads, festoons, birds, insects, 
and human heads. 
Underneath, inserted in a pedestal, sepulchral inscription to Da- 
sumia Soterio. Found in the Villa Pelluchi , Rome. 
Bust of Julia Sabina, wife of the Emperor Hadrian. Pt. 10. Pl. ix. 
Altar inscribed to her husband, M. Clodius Hermas, to her brother 
Felix, and to Tyrannus, by Annia Augustalis. 
Bas-relief from a large sarcophagus, representing a dramatic poet, 
probably Sophocles, seated on a chair, before whom stands a Muse. 
Found near the Mausoleum of Augustus. Pt. 10. Pl. xxxiv. 
Under the sarcophagus, seat n the form of a chariot. 
Bust of Antinous, in the character of Bacchus. 
A small cippus, decorated with festoons suspended from heads of 
Jupiter Ammon; in front, an Ibis destroying a serpent. Formerly in 
the Villa Purioni , at Rome. 
No. 3. One of the feet or supports of an ancient tripod table, 
found in 1769, in the Pantanella, within the grounds of Hadrian’s Villa, 
near Tivoli. Pt. 1. PL m. 
On it rests a lion’s head with ram’s horns, probably part of a similar 
object. 
Altar of square form, ornamented with sphinxes at the upper and 
lower corners, and with bas-reliefs; in front, Apollo holding a lyre at 
stable, on which are a raven, tripod, and three rolls of manuscripts; 
on one side is a sacrifice of a ram, and, at the back, Diana holding a 
torch and feeding a deer. Presented by Sir W. Hamilton , 1775. 
