306 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [EGYPTIAN 
Wood. Small hawks, with swathed bodies, emblem¬ 
atic of Sochari. 3f to If in. h. 
Wood . Human-faced hawks, emblems of the soul. 
Those whose heads are disked represent the souls of 
deities. 6 to 3j in. h. 
Wood . Uraeus coiled upon a plinth ; the head and 
neck erect. On the breast the symbol of Neith. 7 
in. h. 
Wood. Lower part of an uraeus coiled upon a plinth. 
On one side a line of hieroglyphics, “ Amonemophth 
gives thanks to Oeri-hek,” one of the titles of Pasht, 
as the Egyptian Nemesis. 9 in. 1., in. h. 
Bronze. Uraeus, in profile. 
Bronze . Uraeus, crowned with the disk of the sun; 
the breast inlaid with blue and red porcelain ; the whole 
has been gilt. 3^ in. h. 
Bronze . Uraeus, crowned with a conical cap. On its 
breast the name of Neith, of which it is a personification. 
If in. h. 
Bronze . Uraeus, the head and neck erect, crowned 
with the head-dress of Osiris ; emblem of Soven, or 
Sowan. The neck has cavities for inlaying. 3 in. h. 
Bronze . Uraeus, erect, upon a column with a lotus 
capital, the head crowned with the emblem of a goddess, 
mistress of the lower hemisphere, as Neith, Sate, &c. 3§ 
in. h. 
Bronze . Uraei; the head ornament indistinct or want¬ 
ing. The breasts inlaid with a red and blue composition. 
to | in. h. 
Bronze. Uraeus, having the head and bust of Jupiter 
Serapis, crowned with a modius. 1| in. h. 
Bronze. Uraeus, hawk-headed, crowned with the disk 
of the moon, emblem ofKhons-Ioh. 1§ in. h. 
Wood » Heads and necks of vipers. in. h, 2f in. h. 
Bronze. A frog, emblem of the pure waters sacred to 
Chnoum. Three frogs seated in a row upon circular 
plinths. 1^ in. 1., f in. h., to 1^ in. 1., J in h. 
Bronze. A crocodile, emblem of Sevek, the Egyptian 
Saturn, § in. h. 
Div. 3.— Green feldspar, porcelain, fyc. Hawks, em¬ 
blems of divinities in general, especially of Horus. 4 to 
i in, b. 
