92 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[room XII, 
No. 45. A Mithraic group. 
Between this and the next No, a colossal votive foot. 
No. 46. A head of Demosthenes. Purchased in 1818. 
No. 47. The front of a tomb, from Delos. Foi'merly belonging to 
Col. Rooke, and presented, in 1825, by A. E. Impey, Esq. 
No. 48. An unknown head. Purchased in 1818, 
Between this and the next No., a bas-relief representing three 
nymphs standing between Jupiter and Pan. 
No. 49. A recumbent female, resting her left arm upon an urn; 
her head encircled by a diadem. 
No. 50. A Greek inscription, being a decree of the people of Athens 
and of the Pirseeus, in honour of Callidamas. It was brought from 
Athens by Dr. Chandler. Presented, in 1785, by the Dilettanti So^ 
ciety. 
No. 51. A shelf, containing 
A head of Tiberius. 
A bust, inscribed to the memory of Cl. Olympias, by Epithymetus, 
her freed-man. 
A head of Augustus. All purchased, in 1812, at the sale of the late 
Right Hon. Edmund Burke's Marbles. 
A Greek inscription, originally placed under a statue of Jupiter 
Urius, which stood within a temple erected to that deity at the mouth of 
the Pontus. Spon and Wheler saw it inserted in the wall of a private 
dwelling at Chalcedon. Presented, in 1809, by Miss Mead. 
Underneath, a bas-relief, representing the goddess Luna surrounded 
by the signs of the zodiac. Presented, in 1818, by Col. de Bosset, 
No. 52. A seated figure of Cybele. Presented by J. S. Gaskoin, 
Esq., 1836. 
No. 52*. A terminal statue of a Faun. 
No. 53. A very ancient Gi'eek inscription, known by the title of the 
“ Marmor Atheniense.” It relates to a survey of some temple at 
Athens, supposed to be the Erechtheium, Brought to England by 
Dr. Chandler, and presented to the British Museum, in 1785, by the 
Dilettanti Society. 
No. 54. A large sepulchral cippus, with an inscription to Agria 
Agatha. 
Upon it is a small domestic fountain, used for sacred purposes. It is 
decorated with four flights of steps, and four figures of Satyrs and Fauns 
in bas-relief. 
No. 55. A bronze statue of Apollo. Purchased at M. LaUemand 
de ChoiseuVs sale at Paris, in 1774. Pt. 3. PI. vii. 
Beneath is one of the feet, or supports, of an ancient tripod table, 
executed in porphyry. It represents the head and leg of a Panther. 
Pt. 3. PI. VIII. 
TWELFTH ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A head of Juno, crowned with a broad indented diadem: 
placed upon 
An upright narrow piece of marble, ornamented with branches of the 
olive and the vine. 
