148 
ROOM V. 
Antiquities. 
inscription, in front of them, records the names of An- 
niolena Maxima and Servilia Irene. 
No. 7. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
Pompeius Justinianus. 
No. 8. Ditto, with an inscription to T. Titulenus 
Isauricus. 
No. 9. Blank. 
No. 10. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
FI. .ZElius Victor. 
No. 11. Ditto, with an inscription to Silia Attica. 
No. 12. A sepulchral vase, found, in a tomb near 
Naples. 
No. Id. A sarcophagus, on the front of which is 
represented the lamentation of a family over a female 
corpse. 
No. 13*. Front of a sepulchral urn, inscribed to 
Cornelia Servanda and Cornelia Onesime. 
No. 14. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
Serullia Zosimenes. 
No. 15. Ditto, w 7 ith an inscription to P. Licinius 
Successus. 
No. 16. Blank. 
No. 17. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
Cossutia Prima. 
No. 18. Ditto, with an inscription to Ti. Claudius 
Lupercus. Presented , in 1817, by W. A. Mackinnon , 
Esq. 
No. 19. Two earthen olhe, similar to those de¬ 
scribed at No. 6. The monumental inscription, placed 
in front of them, records the names of P. Stenius Ru¬ 
fus and Plosurnia Salvilla. 
No. 20. A funeral inscription to Eutychia. Pre¬ 
sented, in 1757, by Thomas Hollis , Esq. 
No. 21. An Etruscan cinerary urn in baked clay. 
The bas-relief in front represents the hero Echetles 
fighting with a ploughshare for the Greeks at the bat¬ 
tle of Marathon. Upon the cover is a recumbent fe¬ 
male figure. 
No. 22. 
