118 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [EGYPTIAN 
Nos. 119, 120. Fragments from the sides of tombs, &c. Calca- 
reous and sandstone. 
No. 121. Tablets executed during the 18th and successive dynasties, j 
No. 122, 123. Tablets executed under the Ptolemies. 
No. 124. Tablets executed under the Romans, one with the name 
of Tiberius : Christian Greek, and Coptic inscriptions. 
Under the shelves round the room are various tablets, &c., affixed to 
the walls (Nos. 125—194); among them the following articles are 
worthy of particular notice. 
No. 133. A small figure ^kneeling upon a square plinth, and sup¬ 
porting a naos, in front of which is a figure of Neith, with the 
royal name of Amasis. Presented , in 1771, by Matthew Duane , 
Esq. It is placed upon 
An oblong stone, with a shallow excavation in the centre. It was per¬ 
haps intended for a pedestal. Black granite. From Mr. Salt's col¬ 
lection. 
No. 135. A large square tablet, covered with hieroglyphics. It 
appears to have been used as a mill-stone for grinding corn. Basalt. 
Presented , in 1805, by Earl Spencer. 
No. 137. The capital of a column. Presented , in 1805, by Earl 
Spencer. 
Upon it, f a small mutilated figure,kneeling on a broken square plinth. 
No. 140. A large head from a mummy-shaped sarcophagus. 
Gray granite. 
No. 145. A fragment covered with hieroglyphics. Presented , in 
1805, by Earl Spencer. 
Nos. 169—171; 173—177; 179—181 are fresco paintings, chiefly 
illustrative of the domestic habits of the Egyptians. No. 1 75, presented 
by Sir H. Ellis , 1834. 
Under No. 168. A head, of white stone. 
Under No. 169. A torso, of marble. 
Under No. 170. Fragments of sandstone, with hieroglyphics. 
Under No. 171. A fragment of a statue holding a staff or sceptre 
ornamented at the top with a head, of Isis. 
Under No. 173. The upper half of a seated statue. White stone. 
From Mr. Sams' collection. 
Under No. 174. A bust broken from a statue. Gray granite. 
Under No. 175. A mutilated statue of Thothmes III. Black ba¬ 
salt. From Mr. Sams' collection. ! 
Under- No. 176. Fragment of a bas-relief representing a group| i 
resembling No. 5. t 
A small statue of Amounemhe, an officer of state, seated on a $ 
throne. Basalt. ! c 
Under No. 177. The fragment of a statue holding a tablet, whereon 1 
appears the name of Amenoph 111. (Memnon). Arragonite. r 
* No. 178. Sepulchral vase of Amounemape, one of the sons of [ 
Rameses 111. 
Under No. 179. A sphinx, without wings. Found in the excavation \ 
made in front of the Great Sphinx. Calcareous stone. Presented \ 
in 1817, by Captain Caviglia. 
Under No. 180. The head of the urseus which decorated that ofl j t 
the Great Sphinx. Calcareous stone. 
