EGYPTIAN AND ASSYRIAN ANTIQUITIES. 53 



that published by Sir Henry Rawlinson in 

 Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, IV. 

 35, No. 4. 



4. Steatite tablet, inscribed with the name and 



titles of Amar-Sin, King of Babylonia ; about 

 B.C. 3500. 



5. Lapis-lazuli tablet, bearing an inscription of a 



King of Babylonia, who styles himself " lord of 

 sixty gods " ; about B.C. 4000. 



ill. Phoenician : — 



1. Limestone altar, with bi-lingual inscription in 



Phoenician and Cypriote, dedicated to Resheph 

 Elayith, by Menahem, in the 30th year of 

 Malki-yathan, King of Citium and Idalium ; 

 about B.C. 345. From Cyprus. 



2. Limestone altar with Phoenician inscription of the 



same period. From Cyprus. 



iv. Cyprian : — 



Limestone group of three figures. 



Presents. 



1. Ushahti figure of Nef er Renpit. XXVIth dynasty ; 



about B.C. 550. 



Presented hy A. W. Franks, Esq., C.B., Litt.D., 



P.S.A., F.R.S. . 



2. A Greek ostrakon, and a Demotic ostrakon. Roman 



period. 



Presented hy R. Phene Spiers, Esq., f.r.i.b.a. 



3. Papyrus, inscribed in Demotic, with list of 



accounts, etc. Late period. 



Presented hy Colonel John Evans. 



4. A haematite Gnostic amulet, upon one side of 



which is a representation of St. George slaying 

 the Dragon, and on the other, in Greek letters, 

 the inscription, " Seal of God." 

 Presented hy H. Wellings, Esq. 



5. Green basalt weight, inscribed with the name of 



Nebuchadnezzar II., for one mana, according 

 to the standard fixed by Dungi, King of Baby- 

 lonia; about B.C. 2500. 



Bequeathed by the Rev. Greville J. Chester, B.A. 

 0.108. E 6. Fragment 



