A badly damaged cartonnage foot covering made for Shebenwepet, a priestess of Horus-the-Child (Harpa (cont.)
Sandstone relief or stela showing a procession of gods. The relief has been recut with the images mo (cont.)
Coffin fragment with hieroglyphs inside and out (probably the Book of the Dead). Those inside consis (cont.)
Fragment of a blue faience pendant in the shape of a cartouche, with remains of the Didactic name of (cont.)
Limestone stela dating to the Twenty-sixth Dynasty with decoration painted on the front face. The de (cont.)
Large sandstone stela dating to the Twenty-sixth Dynasty (c. 664–332 BC). The stela is decorated on (cont.)
Re-Horakhty amulet in faience. The hawk-headed god is wearing a tripartite wig and a sun disc with a (cont.)
A light brown glazed steatite scarab, which is pierced longitudinally for suspension. The scarab has (cont.)
Re-Horakhty amulet in faience. He is wearing a sun disc with uraeus. He is in a striding position. B (cont.)
Limestone seated statue of Senetre, which dates to the Eighteenth Dynasty (1550–1292 BC). The statue (cont.)
A rectangular wooden base of a Ptah Sokar Osiris figure, likely dating from the Twenty-fifth–Twenty- (cont.)
A fragment of linen decorated with a hieratic script and with drawing of Re-Horakhty on a throne hol (cont.)
Wooden stela. The upper register shows the winged sun's disc, here shown as Horus of Edfu. Below tha (cont.)
A wooden Ptah-Sokar-Osiris figure, which dates to the Twenty-fifth–Twenty-sixth Dynasty (c. 750–525 (cont.)