ANGLO-ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 
87 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Domitian 
when he was consul for the eighth time, a.d. 82, weighing 154 lbs. 
It was discovered in 1731 under ground, on Hayshaw Moor, in 
the West Riding of Yorkshire, half-way between an ancient lead 
mine, north of Pateley Bridge, and the Roman road from Ilkley, 
Olicana , to Aldborough, Isurium. Bequeathed by Sir J. Ingleby , 
Bart., and presented by his Executors , 1772. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Hadrian, 
weighing 191 lbs. ; found in 1796 or 1797, at Snailbeach Farm, 
Parish of Westbury, 10 miles south-west of Shrewsbury. Presented 
by J. Lloyd, Esq., 1798. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of the Emperor Hadrian, 
weighing 125 lbs. Found on Cromford Moor, in Derbyshire. Pre¬ 
sented by A. Woolley and P. Nightingale, Esqs., 1797. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of L. Aruconius Verecundus, 
and the letters metal, lvtvd, probably the mine of Lutudce. Found 
near Matlock Bank, in Derbyshire. Presented by A. Woolley and 
P. Nightingale, Esqs., 1797. 
A pig of lead, inscribed cl . tr . lvt . br . ex . arg, found with 
three other pigs, and some broken Roman pottery, at Broomer’s 
Hill, in the parish of Pulborough, Sussex, January 31, 1824, close to 
the Roman road, Stone Street, from London to Chichester. (For a 
pig of lead with a similar inscription, found on Matlock Moor, Derby¬ 
shire, see Archseologia, ix. p. 45.) Presented by theEarl of Egremont, 
July 10, 1824. 
A pig of lead, inscribed with the name of Britannicus, the son of 
the Emperor Claudius; found on the Mendip Hills, Somersetshire. 
Presented by James Williams, Esq., 1854. 
COMPARTMENT IV. 
On the wall: portion of tesselated pavement, discovered under the 
south-west angle of the Bank of England, 1805. Presented by the 
Governor of the Bank of England, 1806. 
Underneath: A large stone vessel in form of half an octagon ; on 
four of the sides are sculptured busts in high relief, viz., Venus hold¬ 
ing a mirror; Jupiter; Mercury with a caduceus; and Mars with a 
spear. It was first noticed by Horsley lying neglected in the mill at 
Chesterford, Essex. Presented by T. Brand Hollis, Esq., in 1803. 
A Roman Sarcophagus, discovered in Haydon Square, near the 
Minories, in 1853. In it was found a leaden coffin, the lid of which is 
exhibited above the Sarcophagus. Presented by the Bev. T. Hill , 
Incumbent , and the Churchwardens of the parish . 
In Front of the Fourth Pilaster. —A sepulchral inscription for I. Vale¬ 
rius Pudens, Soldier of the Second Legion, found at Lincoln. Pre¬ 
sented by Arthur Trollope, Esq., 1853. 
COMPARTMENT V. 
On the wall: portion of a tesselated pavement discovered in Thread- 
needle Street, London. Presented by Mr. Moxhay, 1841, and 
portion of a tesselated pavement found on the site of a Roman villa 
near Abbot’s Ann, Hampshire. Presented by the Hon. and Rev, S. 
Best , 1854. 
