CONTENTS. VU 
Egyptian Galleries — continued. page 
North- West Staircase (Egyptian Papyri in hieroglyphic, hieratic, and 
demotic or enchorial characters — Extracts from the Ritual of the Dead) 110 
Egyptian Anteroom (Casts from bas-reliefs in Egypt) . . . ,111 
First Egyptian Boom (The smaller antiquities of Egypt) . . .111 
I. {Religious Section — Representations of divinities and sacred 
animals) . Ill 
II. (Civil Section— Remains of Egyptian dress, ornaments, articles 
of domestic use) ........ 112 
III. (Sepulchral Section — Objects relating to death and burial- 
Mummies, coffins, &c.) . . . . . . .114 
Second Egyptian Room (Further illustrations of sepulchral remains) . 115 
Glass Collections (Egyptian Glass — Phoenician — Roman — Oriental — -Persian 
— Chinese — Anglo-Saxon — Venetian — French — German — Flemish — Dutch 
— Spanish — English) . . . . . . . . . .116 
Witt Collection (illustrating the Bath of the Ancients) . . . .121 
Roman Pottery with Vitreous Glaze 121 
Roman Red Ware . . . . 121 
Early Italian and Etruscan Pottery . . . . . . .121 
First Vase Room (Fictile Vases discovered in Tombs in Italy, Greece, the 
adjacent islands, and other countries of the Mediterranean) . . .122 
Second Vase Room (Later Greek Fictile Vases — Greek and Roman Terracottas 
—Roman Mural Paintings — Miscellaneous antiquities in lead, bone, ivory, 
glass, and other materials) . .124 
Bronze Room (Greek, Etruscan, and Roman bronzes) . . . . .127 
British and Medieval Room ......... 131 
British Antiquities (anterior to the Roman invasion) . . . .132 
Roman Antiquities found in Britain . . . . . . .133 
Anglo-Saxon Antiquities . . . . . . . . .134 
Early Christian Collection (Lamps, crosses, and subjects from the Old and 
New Testaments) . . . . . . . . .135 
Medieval Collection (Sculpture and carving in ivory, &c. — Paintings— .Metal 
work — Matrices of Seals — Astrolabes, quadrants, dials, &c. — Enamels — 
English and Medieval Pottery — Italian Majolica — German Stoneware) . 135 
