226 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[EGYPTIAN 
Small vase with four handles. Porcelain, or opaque glass. 
Small diota; one handle broken. Porcelain, or opaque glass. 
in. h. Memphis. 
Small jug, richly ornamented; a portion of the handle still re¬ 
maining. Porcelain, or opaque glass- 3J in. h. 
Vase in shape of the ibex, standing on a plinth ; the mouth of the 
vessel on the back. Underneath, a small animal. Pottery . 2J in. h. 
Vases in the shape of a hedgehog; the aperture on the back; one 
has before it a human head. Pottery. If in. h. Thebes. 
Vases with long necks; one with the neck twisted. Glass. 7 \ to 
2 in. h. 
Div. 3. Large blue bowl: without, petals of flowers; within, a 
square divided into triangles, the alternate ones darker; in each 
comer a stem of five lotus and papyrus flowers, alternately. Por- 
celain. 10 in. dr. 
Bowl; on it the names and titles of Rameses II. or TIL (Sesostris), 
a band of flowers, and the calyx and petals of the lotus. Porcelain . 
4 in. dr., 2J in. h. 
Vases with flat circular bodies, and necks of lotus flowers, apes, and 
dskhs; on the lateral bands are invocations to Amoun, Phtah, Nefer- 
Atum, Khons, Neith, and Pasht. Porcelain, pottery, Sfc. 5J to 3 
in. h. Thebes. 
Various vases of polished terracotta. 
Vase, or rather lamp in shape of a small bottle, wfith a spout; above, 
six small circular holes. Pottery. 3£ in. h. Presented by Sir J. G. 
Wilkinson, 1834. 
Double vases, connected together by the lip, handles, or body. 
Painted pottery. \\ in. h. 
Div. 4. Fragments from vases; one, which is from Coptos, has 
the figure of a hare traced on it; on another is a spiral ornament. 
Pottery. Presented by Sir J. G. Wilkinson , 1834. 
Vase of libations; on it various symbols. The body has an oval hole 
through its centre. In front is a small spout, formed by the neck and « 
beak of a bird. Terra cotta. 10^ in. h. 
CASE 26. VASES, LAMPS, ETC. 
Div. 2. Jar-shaped vase, with three small handles on the neck. 
Painted pottery. 11^ in. h. 
Bottle-shaped vase, with three small handles round the body; be¬ 
tween them three emblems of life, with human hands, in each a gom. 
Painted pottery. 10J in. h. 
Div. 3. Four ampullae, each inscribed with a single line of hiera¬ 
tic. Two have stoppers. Pottery. 6^ to 5% in. h. 
CASE 27. MUMMY COFFIN. 
Inner coffin of Harsontiotf, prophet-priest of Amoun in Thebes. 
The interior represents an astronomical scene, in which many of the 
principal stars are personified by the goddess Ta-her, Isis- Sothis, the 
planets, in boats; with the progress of the sun, capture of the apophis, 
