GALLERY.] EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 137 
No. 84. Statue of Pasht (Bubastis), standing erect, and holding 
a sceptre terminating in a lotus or papyrus flower; resembling No. 41, 
and probably from the same place. Dark granite. 
No. 85. Bust from one of the statues of Pasht (Bubastis) seated. 
No. 86. f Chest of the sarcophagus of Ha-nata, a priest, surnamed 
Ra-nem ha-t-men, after Amasis II., of the 26th dynasty, whose pre¬ 
nomen forms part of his surname. The horizontal lines of hierogly¬ 
phics are a prayer. Black basalt. (See No. 134. Statue of the 
same person.) 
No. 87. Bust, from a statue of Pasht (Bubastis) seated. Dark 
granite. 
No. 88. Statue of Pasht (Bubastis) seated; on the front are the 
names and titles of Amenophis III., who is said to be beloved of this 
goddess. Probably from the temple of the south, at Karnak. Dark 
granite. 
No. 89. Fragment of legs, broken off from a statue of Pasht 
(Bubastis), standing erect; on the pedestal are the names and titles 
of Amenophis III. (Memnon), “beloved” of this goddess. Dark 
granite. 
No. 90. Slab, apparently the cover of a sarcophagus, as late as the 
Ptolemies or Romans, having on it, in bas-relief, a figure lying with 
its face upwards, enclosing the body down to the feet, excepting the 
shoulder and arm; the dress and style of this figure is Grseco- 
Egyptian. Basalt. Presented by the Lords of the Admiralty. 
No. 91. A fragment of the legs of a figure, apparently, from the 
inscription, of the goddess Ma, or Truth, erected by Amenophis III. 
Dark granite. 
No. 92. Statue of Chons-af-anch, priest of the god Chons, and 
invested with many other sacerdotal offices, standing, and holding a 
small shrine, in which is a figure of Chons; of the Ptolemaic epoch. 
White stone. 
No. 93. Bust from the colossal statue of a queen ; her head-dress 
is in the form of that worn by Athor, the goddess of beauty, 18th or 
19th dynasty. White stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 94. Sepulchral altar, dedicated by Amasis II., of the 26th 
dynasty, to Osiris. From Sais. Granite. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 95. Feet from the figure of a female divinity, probably 
Pasht, or Bubastis, holding with both hands a papyrus sceptre. Dark 
granite. 
No. 96. The upper part of a statue of Rameses II. holding a 
table of offerings, under which is a water-vase. Found in an open 
plain near Abydos. Calcareous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 97. A head of a sphinx, of Roman work. Green basalt. 
From the collection of Charles Towneley , Esq. 
No. 98. Upper part of a statue of a man, of good workmanship. 
Dark granite. 
No. 99. Altar dedicated to Sarapis, the great god of Canopus. 
Brought from Aboukir. White marble. Presented by Dr. Ban¬ 
croft , Jun ., 1807. 
No. 100. Statue of Mentunaa, or Muntnaa, a high military officer, 
seated on a throne, and holding a sash folded up in his' right hand; 
