113 
of Westbury, 10 miles SW. of Salop. Presented^ 
in 17985 hij John Lloyd, Esq, 
Noc 10. A pig of lead, also inscribed with the 
name of the Emperor Hadrian. Its weight is 
125 pounds. It was found in Cromford Moor, 
in Derbyshire. Presented, in 1797, by Adam 
Wolley, Esq, and Peter Nightingale, Esq, 
No. llo A large sepulchral cippus, with an 
inscription to Agria Agatha. 
EIGHTH ROOM. 
EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 
No. 1. The coffin of an Egyptian mummy, 
sent to England by Edward Wortley Montague, 
Esq., and presented to the Museum, in 1766, 
by His late 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 beau¬ 
tifully 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 with paintings, 
was taken out of the coffin which will be de¬ 
scribed in the next number. In the lower part 
of this case is a small Egyptian coffin of an oblong 
square form ; it contains the mummy of a child. 
The lid and sides of this coffin are covered with 
paintings. 
I No. 3. 
ROOM vir. 
Antiquitids, 
ROOM VIII. 
Antiquities. 
