THIRD GRiECO-ROMAN SALOON. 
97 
size ; she is draped in a long tunic and peplus , and crowned with ivy- 
leaves ; in her right hand she bears a thyrsus , in her left a bunch of 
grapes, and beside her is a small panther. Found in 1776, at Roma 
Vecchia. Pt. 10. PL xxm. 
Bas-relief representing an old Satyr seizing the robe of a nymph, 
under a tree. Pt. 2. PL i. 
j Below, on the second bracket: Head of the youthful Bacchus 
(.Dionusos ), crowned with an ivy wreath. Purchased at the sale of the 
late Lord Mountnorris , 1852. 
Terminus of the bearded or Indian Bacchus, wearing a diadem, the 
execution of the hair resembling bronze; the whole is in unusually 
good preservation. Found , in 1771, at JBaice. Pt. 2. PL xxix. 
Statue of Bacchus as a boy, life-size, crowned with an ivy wreath, 
and wearing a goat’s skin ; the arms are modern. Found in the Villa 
of Antoninus Pius , near the ancient Lanuvium. 
On a bracket above: Head of effeminate type, bound with a diadem ; 
formerly attributed to Apollo, but more probably Bacchus. 
Terminal bust of the bearded Bacchus, of similar type to the 
terminus just described. Found on the same spot , at the same time. 
Pt. 2. PL xxx. 
Small statue of a beardless Satyr, with goat’s ears and horns, entirely 
naked; the arms are modern : on the trunk of a tree, which supports 
it, is a Greek inscription, recording that the figure is the work of 
Marcus Cossutius Cerdo, the freedman of Marcus. Found in the Villa 
of Antoninus Pius , near Civita Lavinia , 1775. Pt. 2. PL xliii. 
Group of Bacchus and Ampelus, small-life-size; Bacchus, crowned 
with an ivy chaplet, and wearing only a panther’s skin, leans upon 
Ampelus, who is represented at the moment of transformation into a 
vine-tree, and is offering his patron some grapes: a small panther, 
wearing a collar of ivy leaves, is furtively snatching a bunch from the 
tree, upon w 7 hich also a lizard is climbing. Found , in 1772, near La 
Storta, 8 miles from Rome. Pt. 3. PL xi. 
Small statue of a Satyr, slightly varied from that just described, 
and somew 7 hat more restored; in the Greek inscription the words 
“ Freedman of Marcus ” are omitted. Found with the companion 
figure. Pt. 2. Pl. xxxm. 
Terminal bust of the bearded Bacchus, wearing a diadem, and long 
formally arranged hair. Brought from Rome by Mr. Lyde Browne. 
Pt, 2. PL xxvii. 
Terminal heads of the bearded Bacchus and Libera, placed back to 
back, the hair of each formally and similarly arranged, and bound 
w 7 ith a common diadem; a type of the dimorphous or androgynous 
character of this deity. Found near Rome. Pt. 2. PL xvn. 
On the bracket above: Head of an uncertain personage, possibly 
Bacchus, bound with a diadem. Purchased of Signor Campanari , 
1846. 
Terminal bust of the bearded Bacchus, wearing a diadem, of archaic 
or pseudo-archaic style. Found in the supposed Pinacotheca of 
Hadrian’s Villa Tiburtina , 1790. Pt. 2. Pl. xix. 
Small terminal statue of Pan, in his pastoral character, playing on 
a tibia or pipe: the head, w'hich is of an archaic type, is bound with a 
diadem, and the figure draped in a tunic and chlamys. Found in the 
