GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
room XI.] 
]63 
Case 71. Fibulae, or brooches. 
Case 72. Buckles used by the ancients for different 
purposes. 
Case 73. Handles and other parts of vases. 
Case 74. Ditto. 
Case 75. Specimens of locks and keys. 
Case 76. Spears, knives, and various instruments, in 
iron. 
Case 77. Bits, spurs, and ornaments for harness ; 
fragments of chains, &c. 
Case 78. Some articles in bronze, the uses to which 
many of them were applied are unknown. 
ELEVENTH ROOM. 
No. 1. A Fragment of a sepulchral monument. 
A fragment of a mask of Bacchus. 
A sepulchral monument to Abeita, who is represented 
seated, with a dog behind her in a fawning attitude. 
No. 2. Blank, 
No. 3. A man conducting a bull; from a sepulchral 
monument. 
A portion of a capital of a pilaster. 
Youthful genii contending in a chariot race within the 
circus. 
Fragment of a sepulchral monument to Eporia. 
No. 4. A bas-relief, representing, probably, Jupiter 
and Ceres standing, each holding a cornucopia. Pre- 
sented by the Right Hon, Sir Joseph Banks, Bart, 
No. 5. A sepulchral monument to Cassiodorus, in¬ 
scribed with six elegiac verses in Greek. 
The front of a sarcophagus, with a Greek inscription 
to M. Sempronius Neicocrates. 
A sepulchral monument, representing the deceased 
seated at a funeral banquet (coena feralis); a veiled 
female seated near his feet. 
No. 6. Blank, 
No. 7. A small sepulchral monument, representing a 
veiled female seated. 
A fragment of another, representing part of a female 
procession apparently approaching some deity. 
A bas-relief, representing two men pouring wine into 
