Near the Entrance. A small wooden statuette and pedestal; upon the latter are three barely visible lines of hieroglyphs, in which the name

Doorway. A nude female figure in cedar wood, very much worn and originally coloured. She wears a heavy head-dress tied by a fillet on either side. Such figures were entered among the funerary complement for the personal use of the deceased ([Pl. XLIV]. 3).

First part of Passage. Two broken blue faience bowls. One shaped like a water-lily leaf and decorated with lotus floral designs ([Pl. XLIV]. 5), the other of biangular form, with its vertical sides encircled by a band of very indistinct hieroglyphs, which read

In South Chamber above the Pit. Parts of a bifold wood jewel box ([Pl. XLV], the lid was found in the passage), and the following beads and amulets that possibly came out of it:—

North Chamber above the Pit. A small jewel-box, turned upside down and containing the following ornaments ([Pl. XLV]. 1 and 2):—

Nearly every basket of earth from the floor of this tomb contained numbers of deep violet lozenge-shaped ornaments made of glazed pottery. They are peculiar to the XIIth Dynasty, and seemingly were used for decorating the wrappings of the mummy, as is well illustrated by a mask cartonnage found in tomb No. 25, where they are depicted in rows and forming part of an ornamentation ([Pl. XLIV]. 2). In some cases actual mummy-cloth was found adhering to them, and all had some adhesive substance on their backs.