100 
ROOM VII. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM VIII. 
Antiquities. 
No. 9. A pig of lead, with the name of the Em¬ 
peror Hadrian inscribed upon it. It weighs 191 
pounds. It was found, in the year 1796 or 1/97:, . 
in a farm called Snailbeach, in the parish of West- 
buiy, 10 miles S. W. of Salop. Presented hy 
John Lloyd^ Esq. 
No. 10. Ditto, also inscribed with the name 
of the Emperor Hadrian. Its weighs is 125 
pounds. It was found in Cromford Moor, in Der¬ 
byshire. Presented by Peter Nightingale^ Esq. 
No. 11. A large sepulchral cippus, with an in¬ 
scription to Agria Agatha. 
No. 12. A statue of Septimius Severus, clothed 
in the imperial paludamenturn. 
EIGHTH ROOM. 
EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 
No. 1. The coffin of an Egyptian mummy^ sent 
to England by Edward Wortley Montagu, Esq. and 
presented to the Museum by His Majesty. In 
the left hand corner of-this case is a conical vessel 
of baked clay, containing an embalmed Ibis. 
No. 2. Two Egyptian mummies. That on the 
left hand, which has been elaborately and beauti¬ 
fully ornamented with coloured glass beads, some 
of which still remain, was taken out of the coffin 
above mentioned.^ That on the right hand, the 
face of which is gilt, and the other parts of the body 
ornamented 
