martes, 29 de diciembre de 2015
nscribed calcite vase fragment with the royal name Sekhemib-Perenmmat
Inscribed calcite vase fragment with the royal name Sekhemib-Perenmmat, thought to have been used by the pharaoh Peribsen early in his reign. Circa 2800 BC, 2nd dynasty. EA 52862.
Procedente de la tumba de Horemheb en Saqqara.
Procedente de la tumba de Horemheb en Saqqara.
Foto de Paul Biesta de uno de los bvloques en el Museo de Leiden
osirisnet
mummy
The mummy and coffin of Nes-shu-tefnut, found in situ by Professor John Garstang during his excavations at Nag' el-Hasaya, presented to the museum in 1905.
The mummy of Nes-shu-tefnut, prophet of Khons, prophet of Horus, the son of Iyhor and Teni was found in situ at his tomb at Nag' el-Hasaya, along with his funerary equipment. The person was aged between approximately 15-17 years old at death and seems to have been in a state of decomposition when the embalmers started thei...r task. The body appears badly discoloured and fragmented.
According to the X-rays resinous matter is present in the body cavities, the majority of ribs having been detached. The arms lay across the chest, a ring clearly visible on the left hand. The hips show evidence of post-mortem fracture, the femora have been pulled down about 5 inches on both sides, the femoral heads remaining in their sockets. The feet have both been disarticulated at the ankle and placed one on top of the other with heels facing left. For some reason the embalmers have lengthened the body by breaking the hips and pulling the legs down, and then shortened it again by removing and re-positioning the feet.
See also Preservation Comment in Advanced Mode.
The mummy of Nes-shu-tefnut, prophet of Khons, prophet of Horus, the son of Iyhor and Teni was found in situ at his tomb at Nag' el-Hasaya, along with his funerary equipment. The person was aged between approximately 15-17 years old at death and seems to have been in a state of decomposition when the embalmers started thei...r task. The body appears badly discoloured and fragmented.
According to the X-rays resinous matter is present in the body cavities, the majority of ribs having been detached. The arms lay across the chest, a ring clearly visible on the left hand. The hips show evidence of post-mortem fracture, the femora have been pulled down about 5 inches on both sides, the femoral heads remaining in their sockets. The feet have both been disarticulated at the ankle and placed one on top of the other with heels facing left. For some reason the embalmers have lengthened the body by breaking the hips and pulling the legs down, and then shortened it again by removing and re-positioning the feet.
See also Preservation Comment in Advanced Mode.
LIVERPOOL MUSEUM
globalegyptianmuseum
globalegyptianmuseum
statue
F 1934/12.2
WOOD
statue
RIJKSMUSEUM VAN OUDHEDEN
Schneider, H. D. en M. J. Raven, De Egyptische Oudheid, Den Haag 1981, nr. 52.
Schneider, H. D., De ontdekking van de Egyptische Kunst, Den Haag 1998, afb. 81.
Seipel, W., Ägypten, vol. I, Linz 1989, nr. 66.
globalegyptianmuseum
PTOLEMAIC PERIOD
PTOLEMAIC PERIOD
Inventory number: 14500
LIMESTONE
MUSEO ARCHEOLOGICO NAZIONALE/MUSEO EGIZIO
AA. VV., Acquisizioni e Donazioni, Archeologia e Arte orientale (1996-1998), Roma 1999, pgg. 104-105.
S. Walker, P. Higgs, Cleopatra. Regina d'Egitto, (Catalogo della mostra), Milano 2000, pg.85, n.I 84
globalegyptianmuseum
domingo, 27 de diciembre de 2015
Sculptor's Model of Male Body Wearing Long Skirt
Sculptor's Model of Male Body Wearing Long Skirt
Whom this statuette depicts is a mystery because it has no parallels. The dot-in-lozenge pattern of the figure's garment is known from other Egyptian contexts spanning the New Kingdom (Dynasties XVIII–XX, circa 1539–1070 B.C.) and the seventh century of the modern era, but it is not attested on any other garment of this type. The heavy, sensuous proportions of the body suggest a date in either Dynasty XXX or the Ptolemaic Perio...d.
Whom this statuette depicts is a mystery because it has no parallels. The dot-in-lozenge pattern of the figure's garment is known from other Egyptian contexts spanning the New Kingdom (Dynasties XVIII–XX, circa 1539–1070 B.C.) and the seventh century of the modern era, but it is not attested on any other garment of this type. The heavy, sensuous proportions of the body suggest a date in either Dynasty XXX or the Ptolemaic Perio...d.
MEDIUM Limestone
•Place Made: Egypt
DATES 4th century B.C.E. (probably)
PERIOD Late Dynastic Period to Ptolemaic Period (probably)
DIMENSIONS Height: 9 15/16 in. (25.2 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
•Place Made: Egypt
DATES 4th century B.C.E. (probably)
PERIOD Late Dynastic Period to Ptolemaic Period (probably)
DIMENSIONS Height: 9 15/16 in. (25.2 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
La Literatura en el Egipto Antiguo
La Literatura en el
Egipto Antiguo
(Breve antología)
Ángel Sánchez
http://www.egiptomania.com/libros/literatura-egipto-antiguo.pdf
Fragment from the tomb of Diesehebsed
Fragment from the tomb of Diesehebsed
This block came from the now lost tomb or tomb chapel of a woman named Diesehebsed, who is shown to the left. She bore the title Singer in the Interior of the Temple of Amun, indicating that she was part of a divine chorus that entertained the god during offering rituals. Traces of hieroglyphs in the cartouche before the woman to the right identify her as the God's Wife Amunirdis II. Another scene of the two women together is known from t...he Karnak Temple, suggesting that Diesehebsed was a trusted administrator of the God's Wife, who during this period was the virtual ruler of Thebes. Diesehebsed was from one of the most prominent families of Thebes. She was the daughter of Nesptah, who was a Priest of Amun and the Scribe of the Offering Table, indicating that both father and daughter worked for the administration of Amun at Thebes. Diesehebsed was also the sister of Mentuemhat the mayor of Thebes
This block came from the now lost tomb or tomb chapel of a woman named Diesehebsed, who is shown to the left. She bore the title Singer in the Interior of the Temple of Amun, indicating that she was part of a divine chorus that entertained the god during offering rituals. Traces of hieroglyphs in the cartouche before the woman to the right identify her as the God's Wife Amunirdis II. Another scene of the two women together is known from t...he Karnak Temple, suggesting that Diesehebsed was a trusted administrator of the God's Wife, who during this period was the virtual ruler of Thebes. Diesehebsed was from one of the most prominent families of Thebes. She was the daughter of Nesptah, who was a Priest of Amun and the Scribe of the Offering Table, indicating that both father and daughter worked for the administration of Amun at Thebes. Diesehebsed was also the sister of Mentuemhat the mayor of Thebes
Hieratic inscriptions from the tomb of Maia at
Hieratic inscriptions from the tomb of Maia at
Saqqara
Jacobus Van Dijk
http://www.jacobusvandijk.nl/docs/GM_127.pdf
Irregular Fragmentary Slab with Queen's Bust Looking Right
Irregular Fragmentary Slab with Queen's Bust Looking Right
MEDIUM Sandstone, sunk relief
PERIOD Modern, in the style of XVIII Dynasty
DIMENSIONS 11 x 8 7/8 x 15/16 in. (28 x 22.5 x 2.4 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
Figured ostraca
Figured ostraca, provenance unknown, example of ‘elaborate beds’ subgroup
source:
Figured ostraca from Deir el-Medina
Joanne Backhouse
Figured ostraca from Deir el-Medina Joanne Backhouse
Figured ostraca from Deir el-Medina
Joanne Backhouse
https://www.academia.edu/2257428/Figured_ostraca_from_Deir_el-Medina
Wrestlers' Ostracon
Wrestlers' Ostracon
Two soldiers, perhaps Nubians, are shown grasping each other's necks in what is presumably a starting hold at the beginning of a match.
At the side of the sketch a long hieroglyphic inscription reads, "Behold, I will make you take a fall helpless, in front of the Pharaoh, may he live, be prosperous and healthy." It seems that the figures of the wrestlers were sketched on this ostracon and then corrected later in the final drawing.
...
Two soldiers, perhaps Nubians, are shown grasping each other's necks in what is presumably a starting hold at the beginning of a match.
At the side of the sketch a long hieroglyphic inscription reads, "Behold, I will make you take a fall helpless, in front of the Pharaoh, may he live, be prosperous and healthy." It seems that the figures of the wrestlers were sketched on this ostracon and then corrected later in the final drawing.
...
Present location EGYPTIAN MUSEUM [01/001] CAIRO EM
Inventory number CG 25132
Dating 18TH DYNASTY
Archaeological Site VALLEY OF THE KINGS
Category OSTRACON
Material LIMESTONE
Technique STONE-TECHNIQUE; PAINTED; DRAWING
Width 23 cm
Translation
"Behold, I will make you take a fall helpless, in front of the Pharaoh, may he live, be prosperous and healthy."
globalegyptianmuseum
Inventory number CG 25132
Dating 18TH DYNASTY
Archaeological Site VALLEY OF THE KINGS
Category OSTRACON
Material LIMESTONE
Technique STONE-TECHNIQUE; PAINTED; DRAWING
Width 23 cm
Translation
"Behold, I will make you take a fall helpless, in front of the Pharaoh, may he live, be prosperous and healthy."
globalegyptianmuseum
Nes-Peka-Shuti relief:
Nes-Peka-Shuti relief: Fragmentary Slab with Figure of Female
Tomb reliefs magically repeated the rituals required to transport the deceased to the afterlife and maintain him or her once there. The wealthier the individual, the more elaborate the decoration of the tomb. Nespeqashuty was a vizier, the highest ranking government official.
The decoration of Nespeqashuty’s tomb was never completed, allowing a rare glimpse into the artist’s working process. The three steps of rel...ief carving are clearly visible here. First, each scene was drawn in color with attention paid to every detail. Next, the outline of each figure was carved and the background cut away. Finally, another carving of the figures softened the contour lines and sculpted the internal details.
Tomb reliefs magically repeated the rituals required to transport the deceased to the afterlife and maintain him or her once there. The wealthier the individual, the more elaborate the decoration of the tomb. Nespeqashuty was a vizier, the highest ranking government official.
The decoration of Nespeqashuty’s tomb was never completed, allowing a rare glimpse into the artist’s working process. The three steps of rel...ief carving are clearly visible here. First, each scene was drawn in color with attention paid to every detail. Next, the outline of each figure was carved and the background cut away. Finally, another carving of the figures softened the contour lines and sculpted the internal details.
The graffiti on the relief were written in both Demotic and Coptic, the two latest stages of the Egyptian language, as well as in Greek, during a thousand-year period after the tomb was prepared for Nespeqashuty. Writing graffiti in the tomb was a pious act, not vandalism.
MEDIUM Limestone
DATES ca. 664-610 B.C.E.
DYNASTY XXVI Dynasty
PERIOD Late Period
DIMENSIONS 12 1/4 x 5 3/8 x 2 3/8 in. (31.1 x 13.7 x 6 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum,org
MEDIUM Limestone
DATES ca. 664-610 B.C.E.
DYNASTY XXVI Dynasty
PERIOD Late Period
DIMENSIONS 12 1/4 x 5 3/8 x 2 3/8 in. (31.1 x 13.7 x 6 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum,org
talatat
Fragmentary Slab, "Riverside Scene"
Part of this boat moored along the Nile appears in the lower left corner of this relief. Next to the boat a farmer, carrying two large water jars suspended from a pole, climbs the steep riverbank. His goal is the irrigated field, arranged in square plots, at the far right. In the scene at the very top, a shipbuilder smoothes a wooden plank.
Part of this boat moored along the Nile appears in the lower left corner of this relief. Next to the boat a farmer, carrying two large water jars suspended from a pole, climbs the steep riverbank. His goal is the irrigated field, arranged in square plots, at the far right. In the scene at the very top, a shipbuilder smoothes a wooden plank.
DATES ca. 1352-1336 B.C.E.
DYNASTY XVIII Dynasty
PERIOD New Kingdom, Amarna Period
DIMENSIONS 9 1/4 x 15 x 1 11/16 in. (23.5 x 38.1 x 4.3 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
Small Flake with Head of a Man Holding His Hand
Small Flake with Head of a Man Holding His Hand
MEDIUM Limestone
•Place Excavated: Tell el Amarna, Egypt
DATES ca. 1352-1336 B.C.E.
DYNASTY XVIII Dynasty
PERIOD New Kingdom, Amarna Period
DIMENSIONS 1 3/16 x 2 15/16 in. (3 x 7.4 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
Bottle in the Form of a Mother and Child
Bottle in the Form of a Mother and Child
Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art
On View: Egypt Reborn: Art for Eternity, 19th Dynasty to Roman Period, Martha A. and Robert S. Rubin Gallery, 3rd Floor
"Mother-and-child" bottles were made throughout the Eighteenth Dynasty. Their function is far from certain. One possible explanation is that they contained the milk of mothers who had recently delivered a male child. Medical texts frequently mention such milk as an effective remedy for a variety of ailments.
MEDIUM Steatite, glazed
DATES ca. 1336-1295 B.C.E.
DYNASTY late XVIII Dynasty
PERIOD New Kingdom
DIMENSIONS Height: 4 7/16 in. (11.3 cm)
Brooklyn Museum
brooklynmuseum.org
Philae
Philae (Close-up view from the south of the Second Pylon Entrance at the Temple of Isis)
Antonio Beato (Italian and British, after 1832-1906). Philae (Close-up view from the south of the Second Pylon Entrance at the Temple of Isis), late 19th century. Albumen silver photograph, image/sheet: 7 3/4 x 10 1/4 in. (19.7 x 26 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Matthew Dontzin, 85.305.17
sábado, 26 de diciembre de 2015
Ancestral bust
Ancestral bust mentioning the goddes Hathor
Neues Reich, 1540´1075, Chr.
Deir el Medine
...
Neues Reich, 1540´1075, Chr.
Deir el Medine
...
AM 20994
Djoser
König Djoser (3. Dynastie) beim Hebsed-Lauf (Relief aus den unterirdischen Grabgalerien) / Pharaoh Djoser (3rd dynasty) during the hebsed run (relief from the subterannean galeries)
stela from Deir el Medina
Excavations of the Germanl oriental Society in Deir el Medina
on the direction of George Möller
stela from Deir el Medina
Neues Museum
Berlin
Turban from the Head of a Mummy of a Child
Turban from the Head of a Mummy of a Child
Period: Roman Period
Date: 3rd–early 4th century
Geography: From Egypt, Upper Egypt, Thebes, Deir el-Bahri, Valley north of the Temple of Hatshepsut, Roman Buria XXXIXB, MMA excavations, 1928–29
Medium: Linen net
Dimensions: L. 68 cm (26 3/4 in); W. 40 cm (15 3/4 in)
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1930
Accession Number: 30.3.56
metmueseum.org
Mummy bandage inscribed with a falcon
Mummy bandage inscribed with a falcon
Period: Third Intermediate Period
Dynasty: late Dynasty 21
...
Period: Third Intermediate Period
Dynasty: late Dynasty 21
...
Date: ca. 1000–945 B.C.
Geography: From Egypt, Upper Egypt, Thebes, Deir el-Bahri, Tomb of Henettawy F (MMA 59), MMA excavations, 1923–24
Medium: Linen
Dimensions: L. 10 × W. 8 cm (3 15/16 × 3 1/8 in.)
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1925
Accession Number: 25.3.188
metmuseum.org
Geography: From Egypt, Upper Egypt, Thebes, Deir el-Bahri, Tomb of Henettawy F (MMA 59), MMA excavations, 1923–24
Medium: Linen
Dimensions: L. 10 × W. 8 cm (3 15/16 × 3 1/8 in.)
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1925
Accession Number: 25.3.188
metmuseum.org
Tomb Chapel of Raemkai: False Door on West Wall
Tomb Chapel of Raemkai: False Door on West Wall
Period: Old Kingdom
Dynasty: Dynasty 5
Date: ca. 2446–2389 B.C.
Geography: From Egypt, Memphite Region, Saqqara, North of the Djoser pyramid complex, Mariette D3, Egyptian Antiquities Service/Quibell excavations, 1907–08
Medium: Limestone, paint
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1908
Accession Number: 08.201.1e
metmuseum.org
P Berlin 10131
P Berlin 10131. A frame of six fragments that are mounted with on gelatin with a similar technique to that used by Hugo Ibscher on the Ramesseum Papyri. They contain administrative entries with a year date and check marks, and have ruled guide-lines. From their mounting, they might have belonged to the Ramesseum group, although there is apparently no archival evidence to confirm or disprove this possibility, and no details of provenance are recorded.
Images of P. Berlin 10131 are © Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Photographer: Lisa Baylis, the British Museum.
britishmuseum.org
viernes, 25 de diciembre de 2015
The Egyptian Museum in Cairo
The Egyptian Museum in Cairo
Abeer El-Shahawy,Farid S. Atiya
https://books.google.es/books?id=cAyjwKyoHiEC&pg=PA191&lpg=PA191&dq=Gempaaten.&source=bl&ots=GdW3dX2uyB&sig=GdrzHxOVxao6RLkgZIOB8lMDmd0&hl=es&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwis9eaCyvbJAhXJtRoKHdZ9CEMQ6AEIYDAM#v=onepage&q=Gempaaten.&f=false
talatat
A talat of Nefertiti and Akhenaten worshipping the Aten, from the Ancient Egyptian wing of the Royal Ontario Museum
talatat
Relief representing the king Amenhotep IV with the god Aton at left - 18th dynasty of Egypt, first years of Amenhotep IV/Akhenaten
Museo Nubio
Plano del museo
12. Main exhibition hall
13. escaleras
14. Diorama
15. Clases
16. Open-air theatre
17. Toilets
18. ascensores
Dirección :Calle el Fanadek . 81111, Aswan, Egypt
El museo nubio abre sus puertas en noviembre de 1997.
Fue diseñado por los arquitectos Mahmoud al-Hakim (egipcio) y Pedro Vasquez Ramirez (mejicano).
rey Shabitko
12. Main exhibition hall
13. escaleras
14. Diorama
15. Clases
16. Open-air theatre
17. Toilets
18. ascensores
Dirección :Calle el Fanadek . 81111, Aswan, Egypt
El museo nubio abre sus puertas en noviembre de 1997.
Fue diseñado por los arquitectos Mahmoud al-Hakim (egipcio) y Pedro Vasquez Ramirez (mejicano).
rey Shabitko
miércoles, 16 de diciembre de 2015
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