164 
EGYPTIAN GALLERIES. 
nophis TIL, who is styled the beloved of this goddess; apparently 
from Karnak. Black granite. 
No. 58. A fragment of the plaited beard of the Great Sphinx. 
Calcareous stone. Presented by Captain Caviglia, 1817. 
No. 59. f A fragment of a porphyry column. The quarries of this 
stone do not appear to have been worked before the time of the Emperor 
Claudius, in the first century. Upon it is placed a colossal hawk; a 
bird sacred to the sun, in arragonite. Presented by T. Philipe, Esq., 
1805. 
No. 60. A statue of Pasht (Bubastis) seated on a throne, appa¬ 
rently from the edifice erected by Amenophis III. (Memnon)in the 
Karnak quarter of Thebes. Black granite. 
No. 61. Colossal statue of an Egyptian monarch crowned in the 
het and wearing the royal apron, standing with his hands before him ; 
on the belt and shoulders are the prenomen and name of Rameses II.; 
on the breast those of Menephtha, his son and successor; from 
Karnak. Red granite. 
No. 62. Statue of Pasht seated on a throne. From Mr. Salt's 
collection. 
No. 63. Another statue of Pasht, seated upon a throne, on the 
front of which are the prenomen and name of Sheshank 1. ( Shishak ), 
of the 22nd dynasty. From Karnak. Bark granite. From Mr. 
Salt's collection. 
No. 64. Column, in four pieces, with its capital in shape of the 
buds of the lotus. On it are inscribed the names and titles of Ameno¬ 
phis III., Menephtha, and the monarch Setnecht, first king of the 
20th dynasty. The figure of the god Set, destroyed on the base, is 
untouched on the capital of the column. Found in a house at Cairo. 
From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 65. Seated statue of Pasht (Bubastis). Bark granite. 
No. 66. f Fragment of a large sarcophagus, of Pepari . . . [?] an 
officer of state, son of Nekht-her-hebi; on which are various mystical 
representations relating to the sun. From Cairo. Bark granite. An¬ 
other portion of this sarcophagus is in the Ashmolean Museum, at Oxford. 
No. 67. Upper part of a statue of Rameses II. wearing the pschent, 
and holding a crook and whip. His names and titles are sculptured 
on his shoulders and on the plinth behind. Elephantine. Red granite. 
Presented by W. R. Hamilton , Esq., 1840. 
No. 68. Statue of Pasht (Bubastis), having in front of the throne 
her names and titles, and those of Amenophis III. (Memnon), of the 
18th dynasty. From the palace or temple erected by that monarch at 
Karnak. Black granite. 
No. 69. Upper half of a statue of Pasht, standing erect. From 
the same locality. Black granite. 
No. 70. A divinity, seated, probably Amen-ra, holding before him 
by both hands a small standing figure of Nekht-her-hebi, Nectanebes I. 
of the 30th dynasty. Basalt. 
Small statue of Bet-mes, an officer of state, seated, and holding 
in his left hand a hoe or pickaxe. From a tomb in the vicinity 
of the Pyramids, probably of the age of the 4th dynasty. Gizeh. 
Syenite. 
A statue of Pa-hur, or Pioeri, prince of ^Ethiopia, in the reign of 
