100 GALLERY OF AXTIQUITIES. [CEXTEAL 
No. 30. A terminal head of the bearded Bacchus ; found with the 
preceding bust at Baise, in 1771. Pt. 2. PI. xxx. 
No. 31. A statue of a youth holding with both hands a part of an 
arm which he is biting. This statue belonged to a group, originally 
composed of two boys who had quarrelled at the game of Tali, as ap¬ 
pears by one of those bones called tali remaining in the hand of the 
fig-ure which is lost. It was found in the baths of Titus at Rome, 
during the pontificate of Urban VUI, Mr. Towmley obtained it from 
the Barberini palace, in 1768. Pt. 2. PI. xxxi. 
No. 32. A terminal head of Pericles, helmeted, and inscribed with 
his name. It was found in 1781, about a mile from Tivoli, in the Pia- 
nella del Cassio. Pt. 2. PI. xxxii. 
No. 33. A statue of a Faun; the trunk of the tree which supports 
the figure is inscribed with the name of the artist. This statue, with its 
repetition. No. 43, was found by Mr. Gavin Hamilton in the year 1775, 
near Civita Lavinia, (the ancient Lanuvium,) in the ruins of the villa of 
Antoninus Pius. Pt. 2. PI. xxxiii. 
No. 34. A terminal head of Epicurus. It was found at Rome in 
the Villa Casali, near the Church of Santa IMaria Maggiore, in 1775. 
Pt. 2. PI. XXXIV. 
No. 35. A terminal statue of Pan playing upon a pipe; found by 
Mr. Gavin Hamilton in the ruins of the villa of Antoninus Pius. Pt. 2. 
PI. XXXV. 
No. 36. A Greek inscription upon the convex side of a circular 
shield, containing the names of the Ephebi of Athens under Alcamenes, 
when he held the office of Cosmetes. This marble was procured at 
Athens, about the year 1748, by Dr. Anthony Askew, who was informed 
by the people of the place that it had been removed from the Parthenon. 
Pt. 2. PL XXXVI. 
No. 37. A terminal statue, supposed to be that of Venus Architis : 
it w'as found in 1775, about six miles from Tivoli, near the Prseneste 
road. Pt. 2. PI. xxxvii. 
No. 38. A circular votive patera; having on one side, within a 
wreath of ivy, an eagle standing upon a slaughtered hare; on the other 
side, Cupid sacrificing to the god of Lampsacus. Pt. 2. PI. xxxviii. 
No. 39. An unknown bronze head, supposed to be that of Pindar; 
formerly called that of Homer. It was brought to England at the be- 
ginningf of the seventeenth century, for the collection of Thomas Earl 
of Arundel. Presented, in 1760, hy the Earl of Exeter. Pt. 2. 
PI. XXXIX. * 
No. 40. A circular votive patera, with a head of Pan in very high 
relief, on one side ; and on the other, in low relief, a profile head of 
Silenus, in front of a blazing altar, and a branch of ivy between them. 
Pt. 2. PI. XL. 
No. 40'^. A torso of Hercules: a fragment. 
No. 41. A Greek sepulchral monument. The bas-relief in front 
represents a trophy, on one side of which stands a warrior, and on the 
other a female figure feeding a serpent that is twined round the trunk of 
a tree on which the trophy is erected. On the right of these figures is 
the fore part ot a horse. An inscription on the top of this monument 
contains a list of names, probably of those who fell in some engage¬ 
ment. Brought to England by Mr. Tophara, in \ 725, axid p7'esented to 
