ROOM.] EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 303 
coffin is Netpe in a tunic, necklace, ear-rings, &c. ; at the sides of 
the head, Isis and Nephthys, kneeling. 4 ft. 9f in. 1., 1 ft. 7J in. h., 
1 ft. 9 in. w. 
Case Z Z. 1. • Mummy of Mautemmen, female attached to the 
worship of Araoun, probably a priestess; swathed in such a manner as 
to exhibit the whole of the form ; round the body, ankles, and upper 
part of the arms are broad bands, similarly ornamented : others, which 
are narrower, cross from the shoulders to the belt: the fore arms are 
swathed with narrow strips, like the animal mummies : round the loins 
is a short pink garment; a flower of the lotus is traced in red upon 
each knee, and the nipples are indicated by gilt wax: the external 
bandages are buff colour. The back of the head and the extremities 
of the feet are bared, exhibiting the hair and bones. 5 ft. 7 in. 1. 
Case Z Z. 2. Mummy of the Roman era, in its bandages. On 
the outer covering of linen is a painted figure of Osiris pethempa- 
mentes full faced, covering the whole of the upper surface of the body; 
the face is pink, other parts red and yellow. At the sides of the head 
are Isis and Nephthys kneeling. 5 ft. 6. in. 1. 
Cases Z Z. 3. Mummy of a female named Cleopatra. On the 
exterior cover is a female figure with pendent arms ; on her head, in a 
disk, placed in a boat, Ra seated; Isis and Nephthys kneeling; inferior 
deities ; the deceased attended by Anubis; the four genii of the 
Amenti. This covering is secured by transverse narrow bandages ; at 
the left side of the head is a w r ooden comb, with double rows of teeth; 
underneath the head, a circular wrapper. There is a perpendicular 
line of hieroglyphics down the centre of the body; the ground is 
cream colour. Round this mummy w 7 as a wreath of thin twisted gold 
tinsel with berries. 5 ft. 7 in. (Coffin in Case A A A). 
CASE AAA. COFFIN, OBJECTS OF ATTIRE, SEPULCHRAL 
ORNAMENTS, AMULETS, ETC. 
Coffin of Cleopatra, daughter of Candace, of the same family as 
Soter, (see Case B B B.,) and similar in shape and design; on the 
arched part of the cover are judgment scenes before Ra and Osiris ; the 
guardian genii of the halls of Noutehir; two rows of hawks, with hu¬ 
man and animal heads ; on one side is a boat, with the disk of Kneph, 
attached to a snake drawn by four deities; on the other, the boat with 
the disk of the right symbolic eye, attached to a snake drawn by three 
jackals; before the boats, the mummy of the deceased brought by 
Anubis to Osiris and Ra, attended by emblems of the soul, eynoce- 
phali, the genii of the Amenti, and inferior deities. At the ends are 
the emblem of the soul, the mummy of the deceased, the coffin watched 
by jackals, the Hat, the scarabseus with expanded wings, and the scara- 
bseus in the boat adored by Isis and Nephthys. The interior repre¬ 
sents the heaven, surrounded by zodiacal signs, but without the boat; 
at the sides of the head are four tortoises. The upper end has the 
hawk of Ra, and the lower, the cow of Athor, seated on a pedestal. 
On the sides are the twenty-four hours, as female figures, twelve on 
each side, each procession closed by a thirteenth female, perhaps per¬ 
sonifications of the morning and evening star. The flat board on 
