294 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [EGYPTIAN 
tend his arms to receive the deceased in the west of the 
pure land of truth.” Beneath are invocations and dedi¬ 
cations to Re, Thmou, Phtah-Sochari, and Anubis. On 
the other side, the standard of Osiris, in a boat, having on 
one side a dark hawk, on the other a chest, is supported 
by Isis, Nephthys, Har-si-esi, Thoout or Thoth, and 
Thmei ; it is drawn and saluted in front as on the other 
side, the deceased being held by the goddess Ement; be¬ 
hind, are Ra, Osiris, and two other deities mummied, and 
seated with their knees raised. The accompanying hie¬ 
roglyphics consist of invocations to Osiris and Thoth, 
to the boat, and to Ra, “ to shed his light over the de¬ 
ceased.” Beneath are invocations as before; at the head 
of the coffin are two symbolic eyes. 6 ft. 1., 1 ft. 8 in. 
b., 1 ft. 5 in. h. 
Mummy of the deceased in its bandages ; the body is 
thin and tightly enveloped, the bandages of a dark brown 
colour ; with it are two bronze cymbals, of the modern 
form. This mummy and case is apparently of the early 
part of the Roman epoch. 5 ft. 2\ in. 1. 
Case Y Y. 1. Mummy of a Graeco-Egyptian, or Ro¬ 
man, with the outer linen covering painted to represent 
the deceased in a toga with purple bands, the hands 
placed on the breast, the left holding flowers. Below is 
a disk, entwined by two uraei; on the crown of the head, 
the Hat, and other ornaments ; at the sides, winged and 
other deities, &c.; a pylone, with uraeated frieze; a Ty- 
phonian figure, &c. The lower part of the body repre¬ 
sents a net-work dress, the legs of the deceased, &c., but 
the part covering the feet is wanting. The portrait is 
full face, and coloured red ; the whole of a very late era. 
5 ft. 1| in. 1. 
Case Y Y. 2. Coffin, similar in shape to that of 
Onkh-hape. A Greek inscription beneath the cornice at 
one end, testifies that it is “ the coffin of Tpliout, daugh¬ 
ter of Heraclius Soter and Sarapout, born in the fifth 
year of the reign of the Emperor Hadrian, on the twelfth 
of Athyr, deceased in the eleventh year, on the twen¬ 
tieth of Tybi, at the age of six years, two months, and 
eighteen days, and buried in the twelfth year, on the twelfth 
of Athyr.” On the cover is an inscription terminating with 
the name of the deceased, and of her mother. On one 
