SALOON.] ©REEK SCULPTURES. 193 
faces of a tablet of marble. It is an inventory of articles 
of gold and silver belonging to the Parthenon, and which 
the quaestors of the temple acknowledge that they have re¬ 
ceived from their predecessors, (311.) 
No. 283. The upper part of a sepulchral stele, in¬ 
scribed with the name of Eumachus, who was the son of 
Eumachus, and of the city of Alopece. Presented, in 
1785, hy the Dilettanti Society, (292^.) 
No. 284, Fragment of a Greek inscription, very im¬ 
perfect. (184.) 
No. 285, A fragment of a Greek inscription, contain¬ 
ing a list of Athenians, with the townships to which they 
respectively belonged. We read the names of no less than 
twelve different townships in this small fragment; namely, 
according to the order in which they occur, Sunium, lonidiae, 
Alopece, Pallene, Halse, Ericea, Colonus, Sphettus, Ce- 
riadae, Thoricus, Hephaestia, and Bate. (222.) 
No. 286. The upper part of a sepulchral column, with 
an inscription to the memory of a person named Simon, 
who was the son of Aristus, and a native of Halae in 
Attica. (217.) 
No. 287* Fragment of a Greek inscription, very im¬ 
perfect. (185.) 
No. 288. Ditto. (187.) 
No. 289. A portion of the cornice from the portico of 
the Erechtheium at Athens. (165.) 
No. 290. The upper part of a sepulchral stMe, orna¬ 
mented with leaves and flowers; the inscription is to the 
memory of Chabrias. (226.) 
No. 291. A Greek inscription, engraved on three sides 
of a piece of marble. The characters are extremely an¬ 
cient ; but unfortunately the marble has been very much 
mutilated, and the letters defaced. (309.) 
No. 292. An amphora, (211.) 
No. 293. A bas-relief, representing a votive figure of 
Cybele, seated in a kind of small temple. (970 
No. 294. Fragment of a Greek inscription, very imper¬ 
fect. (192.) 
No. 295. A fragment of a sepulchral stele from which 
the bas-relief has been almost entirely broken away; the 
inscription is to the memory of Hieroclea, the daughter of 
Leucius. (218.) 
