[48] Already published in the Musée Egyptien, vol. ii., Pl. IX-X, pp. 25–30.
[49] The head was reproduced by Rougé-Banville, “Album photographique,” Nos. 111–12; cf. Mariette, “Monuments divers,” Pl. XXI, a, b, c, and p. 299; the whole is reproduced in the Musée Egyptien, vol. ii., Pl. XIII, and pp. 34–5.
[50] See article on this group by Legrain in the Musée Egyptien, vol. ii., pp. 1–14 and Pl. I-IV.
[51] The head of the Pharaoh, which was stolen at the moment of discovery, has been found since this article appeared, and purchased by the Cairo Museum, 1912.
[52] Published in the Revue de l’Art ancien et moderne, 1907, vol. xxii., pp. 5–18.
[53] She is noted in the “Livre d’entrée” under No. 38575 and the chapel under No. 38576.
[54] Naville, “Das Thebanische Todtenbuch,” vol. i., Pl. CCXXII.
[55] It comes from Tell Tmai, and is entered in the “Livre d’entrée” under No. 38930, and in the “Guide to the Museum,” 3rd English edition, under No. 461, p. 164.
[56] No. 38932 in the “Livre d’entrée”; cf. “Notice des principaux monuments du Musée de Gizeh,” 1893, p. 86, and No. 683 of Borchardt’s unpublished catalogue. The monument comes from Saqqarah.
[57] “Guide to the Cairo Museum,” 3rd edition, pp. 331–33, No. 1020; “Livre d’entrée,” No. 38927.