ROOM.] EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 363 
Div. 3. Porcelain, ivory, mother of pearl, carnelian, 
bronze, fyc. Finger rings, some in open work, with figures 
of deities, &c. ; on the faces of several are the prenomen 
of Amenof III., the names of Amentuonk, Amoun-ra, 
&c. 
Div. 4. Basalt, arragonite, porcelain, vitrified earth, 
fyc. Pectoral plates, which w 7 ere suspended from the 
neck by strings, or placed upon the exterior bandages of 
mummies ; many are in the shape of a propylon, having 
in high relief the figure of a scarabaeus ascending, placed 
in a boat, adored on each side by Isis and Nephthys ; 
on the base of the scarabaeus is generally the same 
formula as in sepulchral scarabaei. Many of these plates 
bear the names of the persons to wdiom they belonged ; 
w 7 ith them are some others having the head of Athor, sca- 
rabseus wdth symbolic eyes, deities, &c. 
Div. 5. Porcelain . Portions from the network cover¬ 
ings of mummies, consisting of scarabaei, wings, bugles, 
beads, &c. 
Feldspar, lapis lazuli, hematite, steatite, porcelain, com¬ 
position, fyc. Amulets, consisting of symbolic eyes, 
victims, feet of animals, necks of vipers, plumes, counter¬ 
poises of collars, heart-shaped vases, geometric symbols. 
Sc c. 
Div. 6. Basalt, fyc. Sepulchral amulets and sca¬ 
rabaei. 
In the narrow upright part of the case are several se¬ 
pulchral tablets, similar to those in Case L L. Div. 2. 
CASE BBB. COFFIN, OBJECTS OF ATTIRE, AMULETS, SEPUL¬ 
CHRAL ORNAMENTS, ETC. 
Wood . Coffin of Soter, archon of Thebes, son of Cor¬ 
nelius Pollius and Philout; of the form of those of the 
Graeco-Egyptian era. On one side of the vaulted cover is 
the judgment scene of the Amenti; at one end a ram¬ 
headed hawk, having on his head the ostrich feather, 
and horns of a goat, and at the other a scarabaeus, ram¬ 
headed, quadrifrons, with similar head-dress ; emblems 
of Amoun-ra, in his secondary form of Chnouph. The 
other side represents Harsaphes, the boat of Sochari, 
Anubis, standards of the Ement, Month-ra, and Thoth* 
