GALLERY.] 
EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 
139 
No. 15. Colossal head of a king wearing the pschent, found with 
the arm, No. 55, detached from a colossus lying in the sand in the 
i Karnak quarter of Thebes; the features resemble those of Thothmes 
III. Discovered by Belzoni in 1818. Red granite. From Mr. 
Salt's collection. 
No. 16. Lower part of a seated colossal figure of the goddess Pasht, 
or Bubastis, bearing the names and titles of the king Amenophis III. 
and which has formerly been one of the statues from the edifice of that 
j monarch at Karnak. Black granite. 
No. 17. Coffin in the shape of a mummy of Seveksi, a person of 
the sacerdotal caste, in the time of one of the later dynasties. 
Basalt. From the collection of Signor Anastasi. 
No. 18. Sarcophagus of Pa-neter-hent, a standard-bearer. Sye- 
nite. From the collection of Signor Anastasi. 
No. 19. Head and upper part of a statue of Rameses II. (Se- 
sostris), wearing a cylindrical diadem of ursei, of fine execution; 
traces of colour still remain on this bust. The hieroglyphics down 
the back are part of the address of Amen-ra, and of the name and 
titles of Rameses. Brought from the edifice at Gournah, formerly 
called the Memnonium of Thebes, and hence popularly called 
“the young Memnon.” Presented by Henry Salt, Esq., and Louis 
Burckhardt, Esq., 1817. 
No. 20. Slab, which has been placed between two columns of a 
temple, sculptured on both sides, and surmounted on one by a cornice 
of ursei serpents, and on the other of vultures. On it the monarch 
Psammetichus II. is represented kneeling and offering cakes of bread 
to a serpent, a cow-headed, and another divinity, all seated on square 
pedestals. The hieroglyphics contain the names and titles of the 
king, and the speeches of the divinities; from Alexandria. Basalt. 
Presented by King George the Third, 1766. 
No. 21. Colossal statue of Amenophis III., monarch of the 18th 
dynasty, the same king who is represented by the vocal statue, seated 
on a throne. His names and titles are inscribed on the front of his 
throne and on the back of the statue, having the name of Amen in¬ 
serted in place of another name erased throughout. Found, in 1818, 
in the Memnonium at Thebes. Black granite. 
No. 22. Slab which has been placed between two columns of a 
temple, surmounted on one side by a cornice of ursei, and of vultures 
on the other; on it the monarch Nectanebo, of the 30th dynasty, b.c. 
387—377, is represented kneeling, and offering a conical cake of bread. 
The other side is much injured, having been used at a late epoch in 
the restoration of a temple; on it, however, may be traced the monarch 
kneeling and offering to a deity, &c. The hieroglyphics are the names 
and titles of the kings, addresses of divinities, and the dedication of the 
temple to which it belonged; from Alexandria. Green basalt. 
No. 23. f Chest of a large sarcophagus of Hapimen, a royal scribe, 
&c. ; on the exterior are the four genii of the Amenti, Anubis, the 
symbolic eyes of the Sun, Isis, and Nephthys; the hieroglyphics are the 
names and titles of the deceased, the addresses of the deities, and the 
77th chapter of the Ritual; round the interior are the deities to whom the 
various parts of the body were sacred [chapter 42]. It was brought 
