No. 28. A figure of Victory sacrificing a bull. 
No. 29. A bust of Hadrian with the imperial palu- 
damentum. 
No. 30. A statue of Diana Lucifera, of which the 
head and arms are lost. It was found at Wood Chester, 
in the county of Gloucester. Presented, in 1811, by 
Samuel Lysons, Esq. 
No. 31. A head of one of the Homeric heroes. It 
is highly animated, and is looking upwards, apparently 
in great agitation. Ft. 2. PI. xxm. 
No. 32. A Greek inscription, originally placed under 
a statue of Jupiter Urius, which stood within a temple 
erected to that deity at the mouth of the Pontus. Pre¬ 
sented, in 1809, by Miss Mead. 
No. 33. A bronze statue of a Roman Emperor, 
probably of Nero when he was young. The figure is 
represented in armour, which is most beautifully inlaid. 
It was found near Barking-Hall, in Suffolk, on the 
estate of the Earl of Ashburnham. Presented, in 1813, 
by the Earl of Ashburnham. 
No. 34. A bust of Severus with the imperial palu- 
damentum. 
Nos. 35, 36, 36 # . Three Tiles, in terracotta, brought 
from Athens. The fronts are ornamented with a border 
of the honeysuckle pattern, and in the centre of each is 
a head of a lion, for carrying off the water. Purchased 
in 1815. 
No. 37. A sarcophagus, in the centre of which is 
the portrait of an elderly man, placed in the inside of a 
shield, which is supported by two Genii. 
No. 38. A colossal foot of Apollo. Presented , in 
1784, by Sir William Hamilton. 
No. 39. A figure of Victory sacrificing a bull. 
No. 40. A head of Faustina, the wife of Marcus 
Aurelius. 
No. 41. A triangular base of a small candelabrum. 
No. 42. A sepulchral cippus, with an inscription to 
Viria Frimitiva. 
No. 43. A swan, in red marble. 
ROOM vi. 
Antiquities. 
No, 41v 
