ROOM.] EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 245 
seated, wearing the shenti: the head attire of diminished proportion, 
and the statue of a very late era. Bronze. 2 ft. h. 
Over Cases 2, 3. Outer coffin of Penamoun, a priest. (See 
Case 6. for the inner coffin, and 65. for the body.) Below is a 
dedication to Osiris, and the goddess Athor. Wood. 6 ft. 8^ in. h., 
2 ft. \ in. 1. 
Over Case 4. Osiris Pethempamentes standing. Bronze. 
Over Case 6. Female, probably a deity, standing, her right hand 
clasped, her left flat and open. Bronze . 2 ft. 6^ in. h. 
Over Cases 8 to 25. Casts of the sculptures from the entrance of 
the small temple of Beit-oually, near Kalabshe. This side is in two 
compartments, and in the first is Rameses II. in his war chariot, attended 
by his two sons, attacking the black and copper coloured races of 
Kush or ^Ethiopia. In the second portion is Rameses II. seated 
on his throne, investing with a gold chain Amenemape or Amou- 
nemopt, prince of Kush or .Ethiopia, introduced to him by his 
eldest son Amenherpefbour or Amounhipefbour. Behind the prince 
are tusks of elephants, skins of panthers, gold chains, gold dust 
and gems, rings of gold, bucklers, chairs, feathers, and eggs of the 
ostrich ; these are followed by Ethiopians bringing various live animals, 
the most remarkable of which are oxen with their horns in the shape 
of human hands, and a head with a tuft of hair. In the lower division 
the same prince is introduced by two high officers of state to the 
monarch, having across his shoulders a tray of valuable plants, skins of 
panthers, and chains of gold. He is followed by Ethiopians bringing 
various animals, among which are a giraffe, green monkeys, gazelles, 
and lions. Females bringing their children, and prisoners manacled, 
appear in this part of the procession. 
Over Case 31. Mummy case, scooped out of a single tree ; the 
head in a feathered claft, the face black, the body covered by the wings 
and tail of a bird ; on the chest a vulture; on the soles of the feet, Isis 
and Nephthys kneeling on altars; down the body is a dedication to 
Osiris. No name remains, but the case is apparently of the style and 
period of the coffin of king Nentef, of the 11th dynasty, in Case 70. 
Wood. 6 ft. 1 in. h. 
Over Case 34. Coffin of Mauteneimas, or Mouteneimos, female 
musician of the goddess Maut; on it Netpe, a door with bolts, a ram 
and vase, and the usual scenes. Wood. 5 ft. 11 in. h. 
Over Cases 40 to 57. Casts of sculptures from the entrance of 
the small temple at Beit-oually near Kalabshe. In the first division 
on the left hand, the monarch Rameses II. seated on his throne re¬ 
ceives the principal officers of his court, who bring before his feet cap¬ 
tives of the chief nations of Asia. In the second division, the king, 
attended by his dog Anathemnisht, is about to decapitate an Asiatic. 
In the third, crowned in the teshr or red cap, having ascended his 
chariot, he attacks an Asiatic nation, who are represented in full rout. 
The next compartment shows the monarch attacking a fortress of Central 
Asia; the nation is personified by a larger figure, while the scenes 
going on at the fortress are a female throwing a child over the battle¬ 
ments, and a man supplicating with a lighted censer, while the son or 
brother of the king attacks the door of the fortress with a hatchet; in the 
last compartment he is represented bringing before the monarch a 
