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Eight sketches of shabtis in Dr Lee's collection

Eight sketches of shabtis in Dr Lee's collection:

  • seven pencil sketches on paper pieces mounted on paper and one sketch on paper
  • loose
  • 22.8 x 29.4 cm
  • [above sketches] 'Plate II' (pencil note)
  • [above sketches] 'HARTWELL MUSEUM' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'alabaster' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'painted wood' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'Hard wood' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'alabaster' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'porcelain' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'painted wood' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] '1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] '1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] '1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5' (pencil note)

Egypt. West Bank. Thebes. Valley of the Kings. Tomb of Ay (KV 23). Corner fragment of sarcophagus with winged goddess and prenomen, formerly in possession of the Royal Asiatic Society, now in Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Temp. No. 3.8.39.1

Corner fragment of the sarcophagus of Ay with winged goddess and prenomen, from the Tomb of Ay (KV 23) in the Valley of the Kings, on the West Bank of Thebes, formerly in possession of the Royal Asiatic Society, now in Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Temp. No. 3.8.39.1 (TopBib i2.551):

  • pencil tracing on tracing paper
  • loose
  • 16.2 x 18.2 cm

Note on signet rings

Note on signet rings:

  • ink text on paper
  • loose
  • 13.1 x 21.3 cm
  • [page number] '36'
  • [text]:

'Signet ring of fine gold weighing nearly 3 sovereigns

bearing the name of Shufu the (Suphis) of the Greeks

This remarkable piece of antiquity is in the highest state

preservation and said to have been found at Gezeh

in a tomb near that to the excavation of Col Campbell The work

in The style of the hieroglyphics is perfectly that of those

sculptors hieroglyphics of the tombs about the

great pyramid all the details are eminently executed

The heaven is engraved with minute stars; The Fox or Jackall has

significant lines within its con[t]our; The hatchets have

their handles bound with thongs as usual in the sculptures; The volumes have the

string that binds them differently hanging below the

roll differently placed from any example in sculptured or

painted hierogs in the tombs; The determinative for country

is studded with dots representing the sand of the mountainous

margins of the side valley of Egypt The sign [F35] has the

tongue and semilunar mark of the longer examples as also

the vase in the shape of the heart. The Name is surmounted

by the usual globe and feathers decorated in the usual way except

that the lines are more horizontal than in the sculptured examples,

and the ring of The cartouch is engraved with lines representing

a rope of of which decoration I know no of the line inclosing

the hieroglyphics of a royal name I know of no example but

this; the [Aa1] in the name is placed as in the tombs not in

the centre as of the cartouch; the chickens have their unfledged

wings The serastes its horns to be seen only with the magnifying

glass Of the variations in from the usual made of representing

a volume and the inclosure of Royal names are circumstances

favorable to the genuineness of this remarkable piece of antiquity

for when taken into consideration with the style of the work which

is infinitely more difficult to imitate than little little x(?)

in which details from in which the fabricator would not have

ventured to differ from the known examples'

Note on signet rings (continuation)

Note on signet rings (continuation):

  • ink text on paper
  • loose
  • 13.1 x 21.3 cm
  • [page number] '37'
  • [text]:

'Ring of fine gold found in a wooden box at Thebes in a tomb at Thebes

Gold ring with a figure of Isis sitting
it is massive and of that shape called Opisphendone Thebes Sakkara

Ring of fine gold with the figures of 2 goddesses
engraved in two cartouches surmounted with the
feathers Sakkara

Scarabeus set in gold on a pivot

Ring of pure(?) gold in which is tastefully inserted
2 blue stones and one red one

Ring of gold with a pyramidal stone in it

Ring of gold with a x plate

Ring of gold with a carnelian scarabeus

Ring of silver massive and of the greek form

Sakkara'

Three sketches of objects in the Hertz collection (hieroglyphic inscription of kohl pot, bronze statuette of classical goddess and amulet or seal) and squeeze of seal(?)

Three sketches of objects in the Hertz collection (hieroglyphic inscription of kohl pot, bronze statuette of classical goddess and amulet or seal) and squeeze of seal(?):

  • pencil sketches and squeeze on paper
  • loose
  • 18.4 x. 11.4 cm
  • [on sketch] 'Cohol blue porcelain vase / in Hertz Col' (pencil note)
  • [on sketch] 'bronze in / Heztr [sic] / Col' (pencil note)

Egypt. Memphis. Pyramid-fied of Giza. Necropolis. West Field. Cemetery en Echelon - South part. Tomb G 5210 of Khemtnu. Chapel. False-door of deceased

False-door of deceased in the chapel of the tomb G 5210 of Khemtnu, in the South part of the Cemetery en Echelon, on the West Field of the Necropolis in the Pyramid-field at Giza (TopBib iii2.155(4)), with measurements:

  • pencil sketch on paper
  • loose
  • 23.8 x 19.1 cm
  • [on sketch] '1.3 / 2.9 / 1.3 / 1.8 / 22 1/2' (pencil notes)

[Upper left] sketch of inscribed metal vase, with copy of inscription, not identified; [lower left] incomplete sketch of sistrum, not identified; [right] copy of inscription with prenomen of Necho II

[Upper left] sketch of inscribed metal vase, with copy of inscription, not identified; [lower left] incomplete sketch of sistrum, not identified; [right] copy of inscription with prenomen of Necho II:

  • pencil sketches and copies on paper, mounted on blue lined paper
  • loose
  • 6.5 x 12.8 cm (6.7 x 13.1 with mount)

Egypt. Thebes. Objects from Thebes. Coffins. Ir, wooden sarcophagus and two coffins, Dyn. XXVI, formerly in H. Salt, J. Lee and Lord Amherst collections and at Sotheby's in 1921, current location not known. Notes

Notes on the wooden sarcophagus and two coffins of Ir, Dyn. XXVI, from Thebes, formerly in H. Salt, J. Lee and Lord Amherst collections and at Sotheby's in 1921, current location not known (TopBib i2.835):

  • ink text on paper
  • loose
  • 20.6 x 33.2 cm
  • [text]:

'Harwell House October 21 1850
The great Sarcophagus in the Chapel
The Goddess Neith N Neith [X1*W24:N1] who is depicted in
full length on the inside of the upper half of the
third coffin is compounded of the hieroglyphic [V39]
in the same manner as the god [Q1\:D4\:A40], likewise depicted
full length, is corresponded of the hieroglyphic [R11].

In Sarcophagi from the necropolis of Thebes it is
usual to find the same Goddess in the likeness of a beautiful
woman, usually, with her arms streached over the deceased
as the heavens streached over the earth. That she represents
the heavens the determinative of her name [N1] is a
voucher, and her figure [C199] in this position over astronomi
cal signs. But if other proof were wanting there is a
stone sarcophagus in the British Museum where she
is sculptured streached out, as the heavens over the
earth, and giving birth to the Planets. In the lower half
of Sarcophagi from Thebes it is usual to find an other
Goddess female figure and not the figure of a man or one man or god in the
likeness of a man or compounded of the [R11] as in the Hartwell
Coffin; and this goddess [X1\:H8-Q1] is the goddess of the earth. as might be naturally suppose(?) This figure She extends her arms up each side of the coffin as if
embracing the deceased or receiving the deceased into her bosom

That the stone Sacrophagus here quoted came from Thebes
I my self can assert being present where the officers of the
Luxor brought it out of the pit

Whence then is the great Sarcophagus in the Chapel
of Hartwell house? The answer is, most probably from Lower Egypt. Most probably from the great necropolis
of Lower Egypt there namely the Necropolis desert of Sakkara of Memphis. First
because Pthah of to whom(underlined) the sign R11 is peculiar(underlined) had a celebrated
Temple at in the city of Memphis and secondly because the hierogly
phics are of the form or style of writing peculiar to
this region of Egypt and thirdly because the form of the outer
case is of the ancient form [Q6] most usual from in this nearby(?)
the most ancient times to the most recent in that
district of Egypt (See ancient inscription in the same
collection)'

Egypt. Thebes. Objects from Thebes. Coffins. Ir, wooden sarcophagus and two coffins, Dyn. XXVI, formerly in Salt and Amherst collections, current location not known. Notes (continuation)

Notes (continuation) on the wooden sarcophagus and two coffins of Ir, Dyn. XXVI, from Thebes, formerly in Salt and Amherst collections, current location not known (TopBib i2.835):

  • ink text on paper
  • loose
  • 20.6 x 33.2 cm
  • [text]:

'The [V39] hieroglyphic represents the fastening of the

belt worn by the Gods and Kings round the waist

The [R11] hieroglyphic in the upper part of the

staff carried by the Divinity Pthath only

The age of the Sarcophagus is apparently

discovered settled by Mr Sharpe's discovery *

namely after the the time of the Persian

rule with which time the style of the hieroglyphics

agree

Mr Sharpe also remarks the [X1\:X1-Q1] for the

more ancient forms [X1\:H8-Q1]

X See Mr Sharpes notes

The drawing of the heads of the different figures

on all three of the Cases show that they were

all three decorated by the work of the same artist in all

of them there is a remarkable protrusion of the

lips. This remark does not apply to the sculptured

heads on the 2d and 3d case and therefore thus the

Sculptor and painter were not the same person

as there is abundant proof I Bonomi to show in other

monts'

Egypt. Mit Rahina. Ptah Enclosure. Enclosure Wall. Found near South Gate. Kneeling statue of Paser, Vizier (TT 106), with figure of Ptah, cartouche of Ramesses II, granite, temp. Sethos I to Ramesses II, in Durham, Oriental Museum, N.511 / EG4003

Front view of kneeling statue of Paser, Vizier (TT 106), with figure of Ptah, cartouche of Ramesses II, granite, temp. Sethos I to Ramesses II, found near the South Gate of the Wall of the Ptah Enclosure at Mit Rahina, now in Durham, Oriental Museum, N.511 / EG4003 (TopBib iii2.838):

  • pencil sketch on paper
  • loose
  • 14.8 x 25.5 cm

Egypt. Mit Rahina. Ptah Enclosure. Enclosure Wall. Found near South Gate. Kneeling statue of Paser, Vizier (TT 106), with figure of Ptah, cartouche of Ramesses II, granite, temp. Sethos I to Ramesses II, in Durham, Oriental Museum, N.511 / EG4003

Back view of kneeling statue of Paser, Vizier (TT 106), with figure of Ptah, cartouche of Ramesses II, granite, temp. Sethos I to Ramesses II, found near the South Gate of the Wall of the Ptah Enclosure at Mit Rahina, now in Durham, Oriental Museum, N.511 / EG4003 (TopBib iii2.838)::

  • pencil sketch on paper
  • loose
  • 14.8 x 25.5 cm

Egypt. Heliopolis. Seated statue of Ramesses II, head lost, black granite, said to come from el-Matariya, now in Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Temp. 15.4.18.1 (probably this)

Four views [two front, side, top] of seated statue of Ramesses II, head lost, black granite, said to come from el-Matariya, now in Cairo, Egyptian Museum, Temp. 15.4.18.1, with some measurements and details of inscriptions and throne decoration (TopBib iv.63A) (probably this):

  • pencil sketches on paper
  • loose
  • 41.2 x 30.0 cm
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