98 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[ROOM I. 
Eagle. Found at Rome. 
Three roof tiles, ornamented with a border of the helix or antefixal 
ornament, and with the head of a lion in the centre for carrying off 
water. From Athens. 
Female draped statue, without the head. 
Votive torso, supposed to be that of an athlete, the size of life. 
Presented by W. G. Coesvelt , Esq., 1844. 
Female draped statue, the head of which has been restored. 
Swan, in Egyptian red marble, found in a vineyard adjoining the 
Villa Pinciana. 
Terminal statue of a Satyr. 
Small sepulchral cippus; on it is the wreath, crow, and laurel 
of Apollo. 
Victory kneeling upon a bull, and stabbing it with a dagger held 
in her left hand ; it is the pendant of No. 1 in this recess, and was 
found among the ruins of the Villa of Antoninus Pius, at Monte 
Cagnuolo. 
Small seated statue of Cybele or Fortune, holding a cornucopiae in 
her left, and rudder in her right hand. Athens. Presented by J. S. 
Gaskoin , Esq., 1836. 
In the third compartment are— 
A bas-relief representing the arms of the Dacians and Sarmatians. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a funeral car in the 
shape of a temple, on which are the Dioscuri and Jupiter, drawn by 
four horses, and attended by a charioteer. Formerly buried in the 
yard of Minelli, the sculptor, at Rome. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing Achilles detected by 
Ulysses and Diomedes, when disguised as a female, among the daugh¬ 
ters of Lycomedes, and about to proceed to Troy. 
Bas-relief from a sarcophagus, representing a marriage ; the bride¬ 
groom holding the marriage contract, attended by the bridesmen and 
the bride. Juno Pronuba; a head of Hymen and a hand of the 
bridesmaid is still remaining on this slab. 
Bas-relief representing the goddess Luna surrounded by the signs of 
the Zodiac. Presented by Col. de Bosset, 1811. 
Alabaster Etruscan sarcophagus, with its cover in shape of a recum¬ 
bent female, and on its chest the hunt of the Calydonian boar. 
Small statue of a fisherman, who carries a leathern bucket sus¬ 
pended from his left arm ; the head is covered with a mariner’s 
bonnet; a dolphin serves as a support for the figure. 
Etruscan sarcophagus, in peperino; the cover in shape of a recum¬ 
bent female ; on the chest is Scylla. 
Small statue of a fisherman, in a rough w T oollen garment, holding a 
basket of fish in his left hand. From Rome. 
Small Etruscan sarcophagus in alabaster; the cover is in shape of a 
recumbent female, and on the chest is a bas-relief, representing 
Penthesilea dragged from her chariot and killed by Achilles. 
Sun dial, in the shape of a chair. 
Sepulchral urn in shape of a lecythus, representing a person named 
Alcidamos taking leave of a female named Hedyle. 
Sepulchral monument of a person, son of Diodorus, who is repre¬ 
sented standing with a cloak round his arm, with a slave looking up to 
