Footnote 14: [(return)]
Encyclopaedia of Antiquities, p. 64.
Footnote 15: [(return)]
See an Interesting Inquiry on Burying in Vaults, by an esteemed Correspondent, since deceased—in vol. xv. of The Mirror.
Footnote 16: [(return)]
Rome, &c., vol. ii.
Footnote 17: [(return)]
Rome, &c., vol. ii.
Footnote 18: [(return)]
Classical Tour, vol. i., p. 407.
Footnote 19: [(return)]
Rome, &c., vol. ii.—From the monument we learn that he was the contemporary of Caesar and Augustus, but his name does not appear in the annals, or the literature of that eventful and enlightened period; of his wealth, and of his pride, this magnificent tomb is a sufficient record: but of his merits or his virtues, no trace remains. The inscription only tells us he was one of the seven Epulones, whose office was to furnish and to eat the sacred banquets offered to Jupiter and the Gods.
Footnote 20: [(return)]
Rome, &c., vol. ii.
Footnote 21: [(return)]
Archaeologia, vol. xx. p. 59.
Footnote 22: [(return)]
Ibid pp. 60, 61.
Footnote 23: [(return)]
Ellis's Specimens, vol. i. p. 205.