VI. INFERIOR

Visegrid (distr. Pest, ) lIS. Broken lower portion of a marble roundel, discovered in the Roman camp. Visegnid Museum (Hungary). Measurements: 0.160 m. diameter, 0.040-0.050 m. thick. Bibl. Soproni, AErt, 1954, p. 50, pI. VIII, 4; Tudor, Dacia, N.S. IV (1960), p. 356, no. 175; Soproni, R6maiak Visegrddon, p. 13, fig. 4. a) The principal field, marked off below by a thick line, is bounded at the sides by two plain columns. In the centre is a goddess with a veil on her head, standing behind a mensa Delphica of which only one leg is visible, and towards her gallop two horsemen with short tunics and Phrygian caps. The one on the right (the only one preserved intact) raises his left hand to strike a man prostrate beneath his horse's hooves and with his right salutes the goddess; the fallen man lies with his knees raised and is attacked by a quadruped (lion? dog?) of which only the head and a forepaw are distinguishable. The man prostrate beneath the left-hand horse is stretched out horizontally upon the ground and is probably also being attacked by a quadruped. b) In the bottom register there may be seen, from left to right: a cock in profile facing left and perched on a block, a male figure in profile facing right, holding the head of a ram by its horns, a person (Nemesis?) advancing towards the scene of occultatio, in which two standing male figures, one facing the other, hold a piece of cloth in front of a third, seated in the background between them, and lastly a recumbent quadruped facing left (lion?) with a crater below.

Kapolna (?) (distr. Heves, Hungary)

II9. Marble roundel, discovered in 1835. Museum. Measurements: 0.062 X 0.060 x 0.007 m. 70 CATALOGUE

Bibl. Antonescu, Cabirii, p. 20, pI. XI, 17; Hampel, A Ert, 1903, p. 335, no. 32; Buday, DolgSzeged, 1928, pp. 18, 99, no. II, fig. 15; Tudor, ED, VII, p. 326, no. 67. a) In the principal field are the busts of Sol and Luna, and below them two horsemen, placed like supporters on either side of a woman in front of whom is a table with a fish on it. The horsemen, bearded and with Phrygian caps, raise an arm to strike two men prostrate upon the ground beneath their horses' hooves. b) In the bottom register are several indistinct objects: in the centre a woman, with her right hand in front of her mouth (Nemesis), and on the right a quadruped; also a cock (?) and a three-legged table (?).

AQVINCVM: Obud (Budapest III, Hungary)

120. Lead roundel, discovered in I896 in a colonnade which formed part of a gymnasium. Museum (Hungary). Measurements: 0.080 m. diameter. Bibl. Hampel, AErt, 1903, p. 353, no. 59; Hampel, BpReg, 1904, p. 10, fig. 5; Buday, DolgSzeged, 1928, pp. 47,114, no. 34, fig. 46; Kuzsinszky, Aquincum, p. liS, fig. 58; Tudor, ED, VII, p. 336, no. 104. The representations are framed by two cabled borders, the inner one terminating above in two serpents' heads facing one another, between which are two stars. a) At the top, in the centre, is a standing woman dressed in chiton and himation, who holds her right hand in front of her mouth (Nemesis). She is flanked on the right by Sol, with radiate crown, and on the left by Luna, with the crescent moon upon her brow. Behind Sol is a ram's head, and behind Luna a cock, while beneath the feet of the woman is a star. b) In the middle of the principal field are traces of the woman usually shown, but the execution is inadequate. At the sides are two supporting horsemen dressed in tunics, the one on the right having also a Phyrgian cap. The one on the left brandishes a spear (?) with which he strikes a man on hands and knees beneath the horse's hooves, while the other stretches out his arms towards the centre,