11. In the Capitoline Museum, the Halls of Busts of the Emperors and of Illustrious Men, the Venus of the Capitol, and the Doves of Pliny, are monuments connected with several celebrated spots in Rome and the Campagna.
12. The places, however, at which most of the important antiquities have been found are the Villa of Hadrian, near Tibur, and the ruins of Veii and Ostia. The following is a list of the chief monuments which were found there and are now placed in the Vatican Museum.
A. From Hadrian’s Villa.
| 1. Faun. No. 84. | } | |
| 2. A Vestal. No. 120. | } | |
| 3. A Niobid. No. 176. | } | Museo Chiaromonti. |
| 4. Clotho. No. 498. | } | |
| 5. Bacchic bas-reliefs. No. 642. | } | |
| 6. Hercules. No. 732. | } |
7. Baths of granite and masses of alabaster in the 4th portico of the Cortile di Belvedere.
8. Mosaics on the wall in the Hall of the Animals and in the Cabinet of the Masks.
9. The Candelabra on each side of the Ariadne in the Gallery of Statues.
10. Colossal bust of M. Aurelius in the Hall of the Busts. No. 288.
11. Corinthian columns in the Hall of the Muses.
12. Colossal Hermæ at the entrance of the Rotonda and bust of Faustina, No. 541 in the Rotonda.