SALOON.] GREEK SCULPTURES. 185 
No. 140. A large head, broken from a mummy-shaped 
sarcophagus. 
No. 145. A fragment covered with hieroglyphics. 
Presented , in 1805, by Earl Spencer. 
Nos. 169—171; 173—177; 179—181 are fresco paint¬ 
ings, chiefly illustrative of the domestic habits of the 
Egyptians. No. 175, presented by Sir H . Ellis. 
Under No. 168. A head, of white stone. 
Under No. 169. A torso, of marble ; the back of the 
chair inscribed with hieroglyphics. 
Under No. 171. Fragment of a statue, holding a staff 
or sceptre, ornamented at the top with a head of Isis. 
Under No. 173. The upper half of a seated statue, 
of white stone. From Mr. Sams' collection. 
Under No. 174. Bust broken from a statue of grey 
granite. 
I Under No. 175. Mutilated male statue of Thothmes 
III., of black basalt. From Mr. Sams’ collection. 
Under No. 176. Fragment of a bas-relief of a group, 
probably a king seeking the protection of his favourite 
divinity : resembling No. 5. 
Under No. 177. Fragment of a statue, holding a 
tablet decorated with sculptures and hieroglyphics, 
wherein appears the name of Amenoph III. (Memnon). 
Under No. 179-. A Sphinx, represented, according to 
the custom of the Egyptians, without wings. Found 
in the excavation made in front of the Great Sphinx, 
j Presented, in 1817, by Captain Camglia. 
Under No. 180. Head of a fish or serpent, in white 
stone. 
Under No. 181. A Sphinx represented without wings, 
like the one described above. Presented , in 1767, by 
the Earl of Bute. 
PHIGALIAN SALOON. 
Nos. 1—23. Bas-reliefs, representing the battle of the 
Centaurs and Lapithae, and the combat between the 
Greeks and Amazons; they were found in the ruins 
of the temple of Apollo Epicurius (or the deliverer) built 
on Mount Cotylion, at a little distance from the ancient 
city of Phigalia in Arcadia. These bas-reliefs composed 
