182 
GALLEilY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[EGYPTIAN 
No. 377. Tablet, with a long demotic inscription, and the remain- 
der of a date in hieroglyphics. Sakkara. Calcareous stone . 
No. 378. Sepulchral tablet of Haru, a priest and scribe, holding 
numerous priesthoods of the gods, and among others of the Ptolemies, 
Soter, and Philopator, of the statues of the king, Meri-her-phtah, 
&c. It is dated on the 6th of Mecheir, in the 7th year of the king’s 
reign, and states that deceased received an embalmment for the space 
of seventy days : that he lived fifty years, six months, and five days, 
and that he was born on the 22nd of Mecheir. On it are apparently 
traces of an enchorial inscription. Sakkara . From Mr. Salt's col- 
lection :. 
No. 379. Sepulchral tablet, imperfect ; on the upper part is Nesatu, 
a person holding various priesthoods, among others those of the Rames- 
seium, in Memphis, of the queens Berenice and Arsinoe, and of a royal 
sister and daughter, Philetsera or Philotera; the figure and hiero- 
glyphics on this tablet are painted and not engraved. From Sakkara . 
Calcareous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection . 
No. 380. Sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period, broken in two 
pieces; it contains a long inscription relative to Ei-em-hept, holding 
many offices of the priesthood, son of Nes-ati, holding many priesthoods, 
among others that of the king Senefru. Calcareous stone. From 
Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 381. Fragment of a tablet ; on it Athor. Calcareous stone. 
No. 382. Sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period; inscription 
much effaced ; it appears to be for a person holding several priesthoods, 
among others that of one of the Ptolemies ; the inscription is painted, 
not engraved; below, traces of a line of demotic. Sakkara . Cal- 
careous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 383. Sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period, for Berenice, 
priestess of Harsaphes, or Amen- Horns, and daughter of Arsinoe, de- 
ceased at the age of sixty-four years, eight months, and twenty-five 
days, who is twice worshipping, traced in red ; below, a demotic in- 
scription of four lines, in black. Calcareous stone. 
No. 384. A small monument, in form of a trough or bason, dedi- 
cated to Amen-ra, for a deceased. Calcareous stone. 
No. 385. Small fragment, on it a judge of truth in the west, 
adoring the Sun. Calcareous stone „ 
No. 386. Fragment of a sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period, 
for Ta-mut-sher, a priestess, daughter of Pet-nefer-hept, a priest of 
Athor and Osiris, deceased at the age of ninety-seven. Calcareous 
stone. From Mr. Sams's collection. 
No. 387. Sepulchral tablet, of Tai-em-hept or Ta-imouthis, a 
priestess of Phtha, who is represented adoring Osiris and Isis; it ap- 
pears, from the inscription, that she died on the 17th day, of the 39th 
year of the reigning Ptolemy ; that she lived thirty-six years, three 
months, and twenty days, and received funeral ceremonies for thirty- 
six days, and an embalmment during the time of seventy days ; the 
inscription is traced, not engraved. From Sakkara. Calcareous 
stone. 
No. 388. Sepulchral tablet of the Ptolemaic period ; the inscrip- 
tion traced and much erased. Calcareous stone. 
No. 389. Sepulchral tablet of Her-sanch, a priestess of Amen- 
