sábado, 31 de enero de 2015

Mummy of the 'embroiderer


Mummy of the 'embroiderer'





The mummy of the 'embroiderer' was discovered during the excavations of Albert Gayet at Antinoe in 1899-1900. Its modern nickname derives from the amount of embroidery in the burial equipment of the tomb. The remains of the woman have not been mummified; the body was totally dried out in the hot sand. She wears three dresses one over the other, which are decorated with heart-shaped designs. On top of her head are a cap and a roll of polychrome wool representing flowers. Over her shoulders is a shawl decorated with floral and bird motifs. Her head and feet rest on embroidered cushions.

Present location

KMKG - MRAH [07/003] BRUSSELS

Inventory number

E.1045

Dating

ROMAN PERIOD

Archaeological Site

EL-SHEIKH `ABADA/ANTINOOPOLIS

Category

HUMAN MUMMY

Material

FLAX; BONE; WOOL; HAIR

Technique

WORKED; WOVEN

Bibliography

  • M.-P. Vanlathem, Oudegyptische lijkkisten en mummies - Cercueils et momies de l'Égypte ancienne, Bruxelles 1983, 26-27
  • K. Otavsky, Alte Gewebe und ihre Geschichte, Riggisberg 1987, 98-99, Fig. 66
  • F. Lefebvre et B. Van Rinsveld, L'Égypte. Des Pharaons aux Coptes, Bruxelles 1990, 199
  • F. Dunand et R. Lichtenberg, Les momies. Un voyage dans l'éternité., Paris 1991, 37
  • M. Raven, Mummies onder het mes, Amsterdam 1993, 112, 117 (fig. 20)
  • M. Rassart-Debergh, Icônes d'Antinoé, CdÉ 68 (1993) 317 - 318
  • U. Horak, Koptische "Mumien", Biblos. Beiträge zu Buch, Bibliothek und Schrift., 44, 1 (1995) 49-50
globalegyptianmuseum

Mummy of a grown up woman

Mummy of a grown up woman of around 25 years old, having a weak constitution. She lived during the Third Intermediate Period, between dynasties XXIII and XXVI. She is completely bandaged, without showing any trace of her anatomy. The body has been cut in two by her knees. The x ray also shows a ring near the 20th vertebra, introduced inside the body together with the filling material.

Present location

MUSEO ARQUEOLÓGICO NACIONAL [21/007] MADRID

Inventory number

15210

Dating

26TH DYNASTY (not before); 3RD INTERMEDIATE PERIOD; 23RD DYNASTY (not after)

Archaeological Site

THEBES: WEST BANK

Category

FEMALE MUMMY

Material

BONE; FLAX

Height

159 cm

Width

36 cm

Bibliography

  • PEREZ - DIE, Mª C., Egipto. Guía didáctica del Museo Arqueológico Nacional. I1985, P. 25.
  • PEREZ - DIE, Mª C., Egipto y Próximo Oriente. Guía general del Museo Arqueológico Nacional, 1996, P. 98.
  • LLAGOSTERA CUENCA, E., Estudio radiológico de las momias egipcias del Museo Arqueológico Nacional de Madrid, Monografías Arqueológicas, 5, 1978, Pp. 30 - 39.
    globalegyptianmuseum

jueves, 29 de enero de 2015

Coloured textile

Coloured textile with tassles from a disturbed burial. Country of Origin: Peru. Culture: Nazca. Period Date: 100 - 1400 AD, Middle Horizon and Late Intermediate period. Place of origin: South Peru. Credit Line: NJ Saunders.

Pre-Columbian skull

Pre-Columbian skull with the hair still attached. Originally the skull would have been attached to the body in a textile wrapped mummy bundle but as the cemetery has been looted the burial was disturbed. Country of Origin: Peru. Culture: Nazca. Period Date: 100 - 1400 AD, Middle Horizon and Late Intermediate period. Place of origin: South Peru. Credit Line: NJ Saunders

viernes, 23 de enero de 2015

Skeleton of a man.

Skeleton of a man.  His body has been deposited in a cave in a foetal position typical of early 'Plains' burials and symbolic of rebirth. It was believed that his body would return to the earth but his spirit travelled to the 'Other World' from where it came, or it would return to this world in human or animal form. Country of Origin: USA. Culture: Plains Indian. Date/Period: 1300 years old. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ Plains Indian Museum, Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming USA. Location: 08.

CAT MUMMY

 CAT MUMMY


The mummy of a cat, symbolic animal of Bastet. Radiography has revealed a lump of small bones and ribs.
The bandages are highly decomposed.
MUSEO ARQUEOLÓGICO NACIONAL

globalegyptian museum



mummy

Mummy of a grown up female of about 65 years old. It has a linen shroud covering completely the bandaging. According to the x ray, she shows the common sickliness of her age, such as arteriosclerosis, missing dental pieces, arthritis and calcification of cartilages. She lived in the Ptolemaic period, taking over a sarcophagus of the New Kingdom, with which she came into the Museum.
PTOLEMAIC PERIOD
MUSEO ARQUEOLÓGICO NACIONAL

globalegyptianmueum

BIRD: BIRD MUMMY

 BIRD:  BIRD MUMMY

MUSÉE ROYAL DE MARIEMONT

 ROMAN PERIOD:  PTOLEMAIC PERIOD

globalegyptianmuseum

King Seqnenre-Taa


King Seqnenre-Taa the Second's mummy was originally buried at Dra-Abu'l Naga, and later reburied at Deir el-Bahari in his original coffin.

The body of this king, who died in his forties, was poorly preserved. However, the brain is still in the cranial cavity and the mummy's mouth still has a complete set of healthy teeth.

The king's head is covered with horrific wounds: a dagger thrust behind the ear, after which, perhaps, blows rained down upon him. Mace blows smashed his cheek and nose and a battle-axe cut through the bone above his forehead.
EGYPTIAN MUSEUM


globalegyptinmuseum






Mummified head of Seqenenre Tao
The mummy was unwrapped by Gaston Maspero on June 9, 1886. A vivid description by Gaston Maspero provides an account of the injury that was done to the pharaoh at his death:
“ ...it is not known whether he fell upon the field of battle or was the victim of some plot; the appearance of his mummy proves that he died a violent death when about forty years of age. Two or three men, whether assassins or soldiers, must have surrounded and despatched... him before help was available. A blow from an axe must have severed part of his left cheek, exposed the teeth, fractured the jaw, and sent him senseless to the ground; another blow must have seriously injured the skull, and a dagger or javelin has cut open the forehead on the right side, a little above the eye. His body must have remained lying where it fell for some time: when found, decomposition had set in, and the embalming had to be hastily performed as best it might






BIRD MUMMY

  BIRD MUMMY
FIBER (FROM PLANTS AND ANIMALS)
Ptolemaic period - roman period

MUSÉE ROYAL DE MARIEMONT

globalegyptianmuseum

domingo, 18 de enero de 2015

Greenlandic mumies

Greenlandic child, preserved through natural mummification. One of a group of 6 women and 2 children all buried together in the same grave. Country of Origin: Greenland. Culture: Eskimo. Date/Period: buried circa 1475 AD. Place of Origin: Qilakitsoq. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ The Greenland Museum . Location: 22



Greenlandic woman, preserved through natural mummification. One of a group of 6 women and 2 children all buried together in the same grave. Country of Origin: Greenland. Culture: Eskimo. Date/Period: buried circa 1475 AD. Place of Origin: Qilakitsoq. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ The Greenland Museum . Location: 22.  woman, preserved through natural mummification. One of a group of 6 women and 2 children all buried together in the same grave. Country of Origin: Greenland. Culture: Eskimo. Date/Period: buried circa 1475 AD. Place of Origin: Qilakitsoq. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ The Greenland Museum . Location: 22. 


miércoles, 14 de enero de 2015

ESTUDIO RADIOLÓGICO DE UN CUERPO MOMIFICADO INFANTIL RADIOLOGICAL STUDY OF A CHILD MUMMIFIED BOY

ESTUDIO RADIOLÓGICO DE UN CUERPO MOMIFICADO INFANTIL
RADIOLOGICAL STUDY OF A CHILD MUMMIFIED BOY
En este estudio presentamos un cuerpo humano momificado
infantil, perteneciente a la colección del Museo de
Antropología Médica y Forense, Paleopatología y
Criminalística, de la Facultad de Medicina de la Universidad
Complutense de Madrid, Reverte (1999). Realizamos estudio
macroscópico y radiológico con el objetivo de estimar la edad y
posibles patologías que puedan apreciarse, y, a la vista de los
resultados obtenidos, podemos concluir que tenía en el
momento de su muerte una edad cercana a los 15-17 años
presentando en el tercio superior del peroné izquierdo dos
fracturas perimorten compatibles con las lesiones producidas
por un mismo impacto


.http://www.uv.es/gicf/4Ar3_MMRobledo_GICF_04.pdfa

martes, 13 de enero de 2015

A trepanned skull

A trepanned skull. It is believed by archaeologists that the first operation performed on this skull was succesful and that a second operation, carried out at a later date, was never completed. Country of Origin: Northwest Coast of America. Culture: Marpole people. Date/Period: 100 BC-100 AD. Credit Line: Werner Forman Archive/ Centennial Museum, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Location: 08.

Mummy Poo Solves 700-Year-Old Murder Mystery

Mummy Poo Solves 700-Year-Old Murder Mystery

//
Analysis of fecal matter from the natural mummy of Cangrande della Scala, a medieval warlord and the patron of the poet Dante Alighieri, has established the Italian nobleman was poisoned with a deadly heart-stopping plant known as Digitalis or foxglove.
The most powerful man in the history of Verona, to whom Dante dedicated part of the “Divine Comedy,” Cangrande della Scala (1291-1329) died at the age of 38 on 22 July 1329.
“He became sick with vomit and diarrhoea just a few days after winning control over the city of Treviso,” Gino Fornaciari, professor of history of medicine and paleopathology at the University of Pisa, told Discovery News.
Medieval Poison Ring Used for Political Murders
The Treviso victory was the last act in Cangrande’s long struggle to control the entire region of Veneto in northern Italy.
According to contemporary accounts, he had contracted the disease a few days before by “drinking from a polluted spring.”
Rumors of poisoning immediately started to spread. In 2004, 675 years after Cangrande’s death, Fornaciari’s team exhumed the nobleman’s body from a richly decorated marble tomb in the church of Santa Maria Antica in Verona.
“The natural mummy, still wearing its precious clothes, appeared in good state of preservation,” Fornaciari and colleagues wrote in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
Lying on the back with the arms folded across the chest, the 5-foot, 7-inch mummy was initially studied using digital X-ray and CT scans.
These showed regurgitated food in the throat, signs of arthritis in the elbows and hips, evidence of tuberculosis and possible cirrhosis.
The abdominal CT scans also showed the presence of feces in the rectum, allowing Fornaciari and colleagues to extract a sample.
Cleopatra killed by drug cocktail?
Analyses of the feces showed the presence of pollen grains of chamomile, black mulberry and, “totally unexpected, of foxglove (Digitalis sp. perhaps purpurea),” the researchers said.
Toxicological analyses confirmed concentrations of digoxin and digitoxin, two Digitalis glycosides, both in the liver and in the faeces.
“Although it is not possible to rule out totally an accidental intoxication, the most likely hypothesis is that of a deliberate administration of a lethal amount of Digitalis,” Fornaciari and colleagues concluded.
Indeed, the gastrointestinal symptoms showed by Cangrande in the last hours of his life and described by historical sources are compatible with the early phase of Digitalis intoxication.
According to the researchers, the foxglove poison may have been masked in a decoction containing chamomile, largely used as a sedative and antispasmodic drug, and black mulberry, used as astringent, which was prepared for some indisposition of Cangrande.
‘Sardonic Grin’ Has Roots in Poisonous Herb
Following Cangrande’s death, one of his physicians was hanged by his successor and nephew Mastino II.
“This adds more weight to the possibility that foul play was at least suspected, although who was ultimately behind the killing is likely to remain a mystery,” Fornaciari said.
Cangrande certainly had enemies. Among the principal suspects are the neighboring states, the Republic of Venice or Ducate of Milan, worried about the growing power of Cangrande.
But the murderer could have also been someone closer to Cangrande.
“It could have well been Mastino II himself,” Fornaciari said.
Image: Stone lid of the sarcophagus with Cangrande’s portrait (A); the body at the moment of opening (B), still wrapped in his precious clothes (C) and at the beginning of the autopsy (D). Credit: Gino Fornaciari/University of Pisa

 http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/mummy-poo-solves-700-year-old-murder-mystery-150110.htm





domingo, 11 de enero de 2015

domingo, 4 de enero de 2015

Hand of mummy

Hand of mummy with part of linen around palm. Only four fingers left. On two fingers are blue faience rings.

MM 18575
Gift from Riksmuseets Paleobotanical dep.in 1962 through Prof. O. Selling


http://collections.smvk.se/carlotta-mhm/w