190 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[EGYPTIAN 
Horns, deceased at the age of sixty-six years, five months, and five 
days, on the 2nd of Meehir, in the 22nd year of the reigning monarch; 
she is stated to have received an embalmment for seventy days, and is 
adoring Osiris. Sakkara. Calcareous stone. 
No. 390. Sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period; the inscrip¬ 
tion very indistinct, traced and not engraved. Calcareous stone. 
No. 391. Sepulchral tablet, of the Ptolemaic period, for Her-em- 
sebech, a priest and scribe, holding several priesthoods, among others 
that of the Ptolemies, Soter, Philopator, and Epiphanes; a blank space 
is left for the date of the reign, as well as for the term of the deceased’s 
life, also a line or two of enchorial. Calcareous stone. 
No. 392. Sepulchral tablet, with an enchorial in 19 lines, indis¬ 
tinct ; above, a deceased, adoring Osiris, Ra, Anubis, Isis and Nepthys* 
Calcareous stone. 
No. 393. Sepulchral tablet of An-em-her, deceased at the age of 
82 years, 4 months, and 5 days, in the 22nd of Pharmuthi, in the 
36th year of one of the Ptolemies: he was embalmed for 70 days, 
and is adoring Osiris and Isis; traced in black and red. Calcareous 
stone. 
No. 394. Tablet, dated; a demotic inscription traced on it. Cal¬ 
careous stone. 
No. 395. Tablet of the Roman epoch; Osiris, Isis, and deceased; 
very rude. Calcareous stone. 
No. 396. Fragment of a tablet of the Ptolemaic period; part of 
a dedication, and the names and titles of an officer. Calcareous 
stone. 
No. 397. Fragment; on it a female head. Calcareous stone. 
No. 398. Tablet, on which the Emperor Tiberius kneels and 
offers a mirror to Mut and Chons, seated on thrones; above is the 
Hu-t, or celestial Sun. It was erected oil account of certain repairs 
made to the shrines of these gods. Sandstone. 
No. 399. Sepulchral tablet of the Roman period, in bas-relief; 
Anubis holding the hand of a deceased, and introducing him into the 
presence of Osiris; above, jackals, celestial Sun, &c.; coloured. 
On it are traces of an enchorial or demotic inscription. Calcareous 
stone. 
No. 400. Sepulchral tablet of the Roman epoch, in bas-relief; on 
it xAnubis, introducing Tamus, a deceased female, into the presence of 
Osiris and Isis; the name of the deceased is in Greek below. Cal¬ 
careous stone. 
No. 401. Sepulchral tablet of the Roman era, in shape of a gate, 
in which is an arch, having under it a small shrine, in the centre of 
which is a urseus, full face, disked. Calcareous stone. 
No. 402. Fragment of a tablet, in which, in bas-relief, is a snake, 
with the head of the god Serapis, having at its side the club of Her¬ 
cules, and the cantharus, or cup of Bacchus. Calcareous stone. 
No. 403. Fragment of four lines of a Coptic inscription, appa¬ 
rently sepulchral. Calcareous stone. 
No. 404. Rectangular sepulchral tablet; on it is a Coptic inscrip¬ 
tion, recording the death of Phibamon, on the 26th of the month 
Pashons. Calcareous stone. 
No. 405. Christian sepulchral tablet, with a Greek inscription re- 
