Tour to the sepulchres of Etruria, in 1839 . d was utterly destroyed. I confess it wouldhave been a satisfaction to me to have seen the cavein which those things had existed, and to have pene-trated through to the line of sepulchres with whichit was connected, but the Italians do not seem tohave this feeling nationally, nor to estimate theirantiquities in any other manner than as to how^many scudi each is likely to sell for. There wereseveral urns in the grotta on the left-hand side ofthe door, some of them containing burnt bones, butCampanari gives no description of them, and I donot know wha


Tour to the sepulchres of Etruria, in 1839 . d was utterly destroyed. I confess it wouldhave been a satisfaction to me to have seen the cavein which those things had existed, and to have pene-trated through to the line of sepulchres with whichit was connected, but the Italians do not seem tohave this feeling nationally, nor to estimate theirantiquities in any other manner than as to how^many scudi each is likely to sell for. There wereseveral urns in the grotta on the left-hand side ofthe door, some of them containing burnt bones, butCampanari gives no description of them, and I donot know what has become of them. APPENDICES. 541 Appendix H.—Page 423. CASTEL daSSO. Ill the annals of the Archseologieal Society, I havefound seven inscriptions J^ (3 H1 meist EVVOV^ <EI^E^--- Arnthal ceises E urinatess luie:- VWOV * •^>i * uth in st . . E<V-^A0 Ecasuth. the end. LONDON:PRINTED BY G. J. PALMER, SAVOY-STREET,


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