A wooden anthropoid coffin dating to the late Twenty-fifth or early Twenty-sixth Dynasty. Parts of t (cont.)
A coffin fragment with a wadjet eye and hieroglyphs painted thereon, likely dating to the Twenty-fif (cont.)
A painted wood fragment from an anthropoid coffin. It was in two halves, but has been re-joined at t (cont.)
This is part of a wooden coffin of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty. In the centre the goddess Isis is shown (cont.)
A fragment of a coffin of painted wood, with six columns of hieroglyphs. It dates to the Twenty-sixt (cont.)
Faience object. This is described in MacGregor sale catalogue of 1922 as a fragment found in the tem (cont.)
Part of a blue glazed ceramic tile depicting a shrine. The shrine is surrounded by uraei and crowned (cont.)
A coffin fragment of painted wood, dating from the Twenty-fifth to the Twenty-sixth Dynasty. It show (cont.)
This is part of a left doorjamb, listing the titles of the Chief Steward of the Divine Adoratrice. I (cont.)
This simple form bowl has a thick flat base and a restricted rim. It is wheel-made and has string ma (cont.)
A fragment of a black faience scribal palette (pen case). Thoth holds a ws sceptre. Opposite him is (cont.)
Wooden fragment of a coffin with painted polychrome decoration. The fragment contains the lower part (cont.)
A copper alloy votive statue of Osiris, mummiform and standing. It is a solid figure on a stand with (cont.)
A steatite shabti fragment belonging to the Chief Lector Priest Padiamenopet (Pedamenope). The shabt (cont.)
A fragment of pottery with a pale blue, yellow, and black glaze. This seems to represent a headdress (cont.)
A fragment of glazed ceramic depicting the upper part of a shrine with a row of uraei with sun-discs (cont.)
A wooden stela with "6913" marked in ink on the bottom right. At the top is the winged sun disc with (cont.)
A rectangular wooden base of a Ptah Sokar Osiris figure, likely dating from the Twenty-fifth–Twenty- (cont.)
The upper part of mummy case of painted wood, dating to the Third Intermediate Period, likely the Tw (cont.)
Inlaid eye from a wooden coffin. Copper alloy (bronze) frame with white (ostrich egg?) shell inlay. (cont.)