642. Late sepulchral relief. A female figure, seated on a stool, holds her mantle, which passes over her head, with the left hand, and a scroll (?) in her right hand. The relief is surmounted by an arch and rosettes, above which is a pediment with acroteria, unfinished, and a rosette.
Inscribed: Μοῦσις Ἀργαῖου Μιλησία. Mousis, daughter of Argaios of Miletus.—Athens. Found by Chandler. Presented by the Society of Dilettanti.
Pentelic marble; height, 2 feet 2¾ inches; width, 1 foot 2¼ inches. Chandler, Inscriptiones Ant., Part II., No. 91; Synopsis, 1st ed., Room VI., No. 27 (where Thomas Hollis is incorrectly said to be the donor); Ellis, Townley Gallery, II., p. 171; C.I.G., 726; Greek Inscriptions in Brit. Mus., CIII.
643. A female figure, draped, and seated on a stool, raises her right hand to draw her peplos over her head. A draped male figure stands before her, and a boy at the left corner; above is a pediment.
Inscribed with a name now illegible, and χαῖρε.—Found in a store at Portsmouth. Probably from Smyrna.
Marble; height, 2 feet; width, 1 foot 2½ inches.
644. Sepulchral relief, mutilated on the left. A female figure draped and seated on a chair, draws her peplos over her shoulder with her left hand. Above, a pediment.