14 
ROOM VIII. tions of seats or beds. Bust of Astarte. Bust and 
two figures of Atis. Various glass Beads. Two Bells. 
Head and two figures of Boars, one decorated for sa¬ 
crifice, the other bearing a mutilated and consequently 
unascertained female figure. Nine representations of 
Bulls, or parts thereof. 
Div. E. Three painted Greek Earthen Vases, and 
two Lamps. 
Div. F. An Egyptian Cat, sitting, decorated on the 
breast with the badge of consecration. Figure of Cas¬ 
tor. Two heads of Gryphons ; the larger was probably 
the handle of some vessel. 
Div. G. Three figures of Bellona. Two Cats, and 
two Pedestals in form of Cats’ heads, decorated with 
wings, A singular Group, consisting of a Centaur be¬ 
tween Hercules and Aesculapius. Ceres seated. Two 
Cocks. An Upupa, sacred to Horus and Harpocrates. 
Div. H. Twenty figures of Cupid. Eight figures 
of Fauns. 
Div. I. Cybele, the mother of the Gods, bearing, 
upon a crescent supported by the tips of her wings, the 
busts of Saturn, Sol, Luna, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, 
Venus, arranged according to the days of the week 
over which they respectively preside; over the points 
of the pinions are busts of the Dioscuri, and issuing 
from a double cornucopia, those of Apollo and Diana. 
A dead Fawn; the hind leg of a Deer ; a Doe worried 
by a Leopard. Five Statues or portions of Statues of 
Diana. Head of Diomede, which has been a weight. 
Dione, the wife of Dodonsean Jupiter. Pollux. Two 
Dogs; head of a Greyhound; head of a Mastiff, once 
the end of a spout. Dolphin. Eagle, formerly at¬ 
tached to a Roman standard. 
Div. K. Three painted Greek Earthen Vases and 
two Lamps. On the top of this Case is a statue of 
Bacchus. 
Case 7. 
Div. A. Vizor of a Helmet found in a tomb upon 
the 
