GALLERY.] EGYPTIAN, ANTIQUITIES. 143 
of Baknaa, seated with his family, and receiving funeral honours. Cal¬ 
careous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 167. Sepulchral tablet of Phtha-em-ua, royal scribe, in the 
reign of Rameses II. or III., adoring Osiris, Isis, and Horus, and 
receiving, with his family, funeral honours. From Thebes. Cal¬ 
careous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 167*. Tablet of a functionary, who is represented seated and 
receiving the homage of his family; on it are the jackals of Anubis, 
and a prayer. Calcareous stone. Presented by 11. Goff, Esq. , 1843. 
No. 167**. Fragment from the side of a tomb, containing part of 
a prayer from a ritual and part of the prenomen of the monarch Sethos 
II. Calcareous stone. 
No. 168. Lower part of a small statue of Thothmes III., of the 
18th dynasty, kneeling on the nine bows emblematic of the enemies 
of Egypt; the head, which is attached to it, is a restoration, and does 
not belong to it. Dark basalt. From Mr. Sams's collection. 
No. 169. Fresco painting from the sides of the tomb of a scribe 
of the royal wardrobe and granaries; oxen inspected and registered by 
scribes; from the Western Hills of Thebes. 
No. 170. Fragment of fresco painting from the walls of the same 
tomb, representing a scribe of the royal wardrobes and granaries 
standing in a boat, accompanied by his children, and a cat, fowling 
for water-birds amidst the reeds of the papyrus. 
No. 171. Fragment of fresco painting, from the same tomb; the 
delivery of ducks and geese, and their eggs, registered by scribes. 
No. 172. Group of tw 7 o figures.; retouched. From Mr. Sams's 
collection. 
No. 173. Fragment of a fresco painting, from the same tomb as 
Nos. 167, 170, 171, the scribe seated on a chair. 
No. 174. Another fragment, from the same tomb ; servants bring¬ 
ing offerings of corn, a hare, and a goose. 
No. 175. Fragment from the same tomb; an entertainment, at 
which some of the females are playing on the nabla, or guitar, and 
others on the double flute. Presented by Sir H. Ellis, K.H. 
No. 176. Fragment from the same tomb; an old man, with a 
kind of crook, standing by a field of corn ; a chariot drawn by tw 7 o 
horses, and another by two white asses, which are feeding. 
No. 177. Fragment from the same tomb, representing a rectan¬ 
gular fish-pond, surrounded by trees. It shows that the Egyptians 
were unacquainted with perspective. 
No. 179. Another fragment of a fresco painting, representing an 
entertainment, servants passing round wine, dancing women, others 
clapping their hands, and playing on the flute. 
No. 180. Another fragment from the same tomb ; portion of the 
figure of the scribe of the granaries, seated before a large heap of 
offerings. 
No. 181. Another fragment; entertainment, with servants bring¬ 
ing wine and necklaces. 
No. 182. Blank. 
No. 183. Blank. 
No. 184. Sepulchral tablet; on it Tanefer-ho, a priestess of Phtha, 
is introduced by Horus, Anubis, and Osorapis into the presence of 
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