158 
ROOM VI. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM VII. 
Antiquities. 
front of a sepulchral cippus. It records the name of 
Claudia Tychen. 
No. 96*. A head of Demosthenes. Purchased in 
1818. 
No. 97. A statue three feet ten inches high, ending 
from the waist downwards in a terminus. In the right 
hand is a bunch of grapes, at which a bird, held under 
the left arm, is pecking. 
No. 98. A votive altar, with a dedicatory inscription 
to Bona Dea Annianensis. 
No. 99. A head of Jupiter Serapis. The paint with 
which the face was originally coloured is still dis¬ 
cernible. 
No. 100. Greek inscription. Formerly belonging to 
Col . Hooke, and presented, in 1825, by A. E. Im- 
pey, Esq . 
No. 101. A Greek sepulchral monument, with bas- 
relief and an inscription. Formerly belonging to Col. 
Hooke, and presented, in 1825, by A.E. Impey, Esq. 
No. 102. Mercury seated upon a heap of stones. 
No. 103. Front of a sepulchral monument. 
SEVENTH ROOM. 
ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 
No. 1. The front of a tomb, from Delos. Formerly 
belonging to Col. Hooke, and presented, in 1825, by A . 
E. Impey , Esq. 
No. 2. A bust of a sleeping child, in alto-relievo. 
No. 3. A fragment of a frieze, representing two 
Cupids running a race, in cars drawn by dogs; they 
appear to have just started from the carceres of a 
circus. 
No. 4. A pig of lead, with the name of the Em¬ 
peror Domitian inscribed upon it. It weighs 154 
pounds. It was discovered, in the year 1731, under 
ground, on Hayshaw Moor, in the manor of Dacre, in 
the 
