EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES. 
175 
SALOON.] 
No. 459. Part of a small cow of Athor, couchant. Calcareous stone . 
No. 460. Double statue of Mahu, a superintendent of public 
works, seated by the side of Aaa, his sister, a priestess of Amen ; the 
hieroglyphical inscriptions with which this group is covered are dedi¬ 
cations to Amen, Mut, Osiris, Phtha, Socharis, Osiris and Anubis, for 
the deceased; coloured. Calcareous stone. From Sr. Anastasi's 
collection. 
No. 461. Statue of Enuentef or Nentef, son of Sent, a functionary 
about the 12th dynasty, seated, holding a sash in his left hand; at the 
sides of his seat are dedications to Anubis and Osiris. Calcareous 
stone. From S. Anastasi's collection. 
No. 462. Statue of Amen-em-ha, governor of the west of Egypt 
in the time of the 12th dynasty, seated upon a throne and holding a 
sash; at the sides of the throne are his name and titles, and a dedica¬ 
tion to Osiris. Dark basalt. From Sr. Anastasi's collection. 
No. 463. Statue of a grotesque divinity covered with a lion’s skin, 
and brandishing a sword; generally supposed to represent Typhon, 
probably Baal, Roman period. Sandstone. 
No. 464. Head of a king wearing the head attire nemms or claft, 
with the royal urseus. Calcareous stone. 
No. 465. Bason dedicated to Isis and Thoueris, (see similar basons 
28. 108) ; at one part are the three members of the family, by whom, 
it was dedicated; 18th dynasty. Calcareous stone. 
No. 466. Part of a female head, from a group. Calcareous stone . 
No. 467. Small quadrilateral naos, with pyramidal top; in the 
recess of each side is Ani, an officer of Amen, kneeling and holding 
before him a tablet, on which are symbolical eyes, solar orbit, and water, 
and an adoration to the sun; on the jambs and lintels are dedications 
to Amen-ra, Ra, Atum, Osiris, for the deceased; the name of the 
god Amen-ra has been purposely erased throughout this monument; 
coloured. Calcareous stone. From Sr. Anastasi's collection. 
No. 468. Sepulchral Pyramidion; on it is Ra in his boat, and his 
hawk, adored by Neferbes, a Theban judge, and his family. Cal¬ 
careous stone. From the Earl of Eelmore's collection. 
No, 469. Small statue rudely blocked out of Munt-hep-t, superin¬ 
tendent of the land of the west of Memphis, consecrated to Osiris by 
his sister Nehesi, a priestess of Amen : probably anterior to 12th 
dynasty. Calcareous stone. From Sr. Anastasi's collection. 
No. 470. Small standing statue of Harpocrates, of the Ptolemaic 
period, wearing a collar and chlamys, and holding a water fowl in his 
left band. Alexandria. White marble. Presented by Sir J. Gard¬ 
ner Wilkinson. 
No. 471. Small sepulchral shrine ; on the cornice and lintels are 
inscribed a prayer, ending with dedications to Osiris, Amen Horus, for 
Aba, a scribe, son of Sebak-aatetu, a priest of the god Munth. Cal¬ 
careous stone. From Mr. Salt's collection. 
No. 472. Small sepulchral shrine, with the top in shape of a 
vaulted box; dedicated to Osiris; on it Shaa-emap-t, a scribe of the 
royal table in the 18th or 19th dynasty, stands full face, holding in one 
hand a sceptre terminating in the head of Phtha Tatanen, and in the 
other a similar sceptre w'ith the head of the god Ra. Calcareous stone. 
From Mr. Barker's collection. 
No. 473. Rectangular sepulchral monument sculptured on both 
