155 
•No. 58*. A sun-dial. Purchased in 1831. 
No. 59. A Greek sepulchral urn, solid, and with a 
bas-reiief in front; it is inscribed with the names of 
Pytharatus and Herophilus. From the collection of Sir 
Hans Sloane. 
No. 60. A Grecian altar. Presented , in 1775, hy 
Sir William Hamilton. 
No. 61. A head of Augustus. Purchased , in 1812, 
at the sale of the la,te Right Hon. Edmund Burke s 
Marbles. 
No. 61*. Unknown bust. Bequeathed by the late 
R. P . Knight , Esq. 
No. 61**. Bust of a Faun. Bequeathed by the late 
R. P. Knight , Esq. 
No. 62. A Greek funeral monument of Democles, 
the son of Democles, with a bas-relief and an inscription 
in eight elegiac verses. It was brought from Smyrna. 
Presented , in 1772, by Matthew Duane , Esq., and, 
Thomas Tyrwhitt , Esq. 
No. 63. A statue of Bacchus, represented as a boy 
about five years old. The head is crowned with a 
wreath of ivy, and the body is partly covered with the 
skin of a goat. 
No. 64. The front of a votive altar, with an inscrip¬ 
tion for the safe return of Septimius Severus and his 
family from some expedition. The parts in the in¬ 
scription which are erased contained the name of Geta, 
which, by a severe edict of Caracal-la, was ordered to 
be erased from every inscription throughout the Roman 
empire. 
No. 65. A bust of Caracalla; the head only is an¬ 
tique. 
No. 65*. A bas-relief, representing the goddess 
Luna surrounded by the signs of the zodiac. Presented , 
in 1818, by Col. de Bosset. 
No. 66. A votive statue of a fisherman, holding a 
basket of fish in his left hand. 
No. 67. A votive altar sacred to Bacchus. On the 
front, Silenus is represented riding on a panther. 
No. 68. 
ROOM VI. 
Antiquities. 
