room XV. 
Antiquities. 
206 
flowers on the summit. It is inscribed with the names 
of Hippocrates and Baucis. (175.) 
No. 352 —360. Casts in plaster of the frieze of the 
Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, commonly called 
the Lanthorn of Demosthenes. The subject of this 
frieze is the story of Bacchus and the Tyrrhenian 
pirates. (A. 89, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92,91, 90.) 
No. 861. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing an 
elderly man before one of the gods, probably Bacchus, 
who appears to hold a vase in his right hand. (84.) 
No. 362. A fragment of a decree of the people of 
Tenos, in honour of some benefactor, whose name is 
not preserved on the marble. (232.) 
No. 363. A fragment of a public act relating to the 
people of Athens and Myrina. (234.) 
No. 364. A fragment of a public act of the Athe¬ 
nians ; it consists of twenty-one imperfect lines, and 
seems to relate to the repair of the pavements and roads 
in the neighbourhood of Athens. (233.) 
No. 365. An architectural fragment, which has 
formed one of the ornaments of a roof. (243.) 
No. 366. A sepulchral Greek inscription in ten 
verses, of which the first two and the last two are in 
the elegiac measure, and the rest are hexameters. The 
inscription is in memory of a young lady of extraordi¬ 
nary beauty, named Tryphera, who died at the early 
age of 25 years. (152.) 
No. 367. An architectural fragment, similar to No. 
365. (254.) 
No. 368. A Greek inscription relating toOropus. Pre¬ 
sented , in 1820, by John P. Gandy Peering , Esq. (106 # .) 
Nos. 369, 370. Fragments of Greek inscriptions, very 
imperfect. (191, 196.) 
No. 371. A fragment of a bas relief, representing 
Minerva placing a crown upon a person’s head. (89.) 
No. 372. A sepulchral stele with a Greek inscrip¬ 
tion, consisting of four lines and a half, part of which 
is written in prose and part in verse. The inscription 
informs us that the monument was erected by a mother 
to 
