miércoles, 10 de agosto de 2016

Mummy of ibis with snail inside beak

Mummy of ibis with snail inside beak
Late Period–Roman Period

http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/553245

Sacred animals had always figured in ancient Egyptian religion, but beginning about the 7th century the phenomenon of sacred animal cults burgeoned remarkably. In some temples a single sacred animal acted as the living incarnation of a god, in others living species were kept within the temple precincts, and there were also temples and sanctuaries attached to the burial places of sacred animals.
Most of the animal mummies in museums today are from among the hundreds of thousands or more made for sale to those wishing to make donations to a relevant divine animal or god in order to bring themselves to the god’s attention, perhaps for a specific purpose like a dream interpretation or a wish for fertility, perhaps for a better eternal life.
Research on animal mummies has shown that the majority of mummies found at the large animal cemetery sites are pre-adults who were purposely killed for use as donations. Some of the mummies are actually ‘substitute’ mummies containing only a few bones or feathers or possibly just sticks or sand.
Recently a review of the museum's animal mummies and their x-rays was conducted in consultation with an expert in their study, and brought to light a number of interesting points. In this particular case the wrappings, where the face of the divine animal is missing, contain the full skeleton of an ibis. In the x-ray at least one snail shell can be identified in the bird's beak. An ibis mummy from Abydos with a snail in its beak was also noted not long ago, and a recent study found three other ibis mummies whose internal organs had been wrapped and replaced in the body along with snails or grain. Apparently these small foodstuffs provided sustenance for the animal's eternity.

Momias




Según Brier, los egipcios momificaban todo tipo de animales desde ratones a bueyes y los clasifica en 4 grupos, dependiendo de los objetivos, en el primer grupo estarían las mascotas, que al morir eran momificadas y enterradas con verdadero cariño: en el segundo grupo staríam los animales que se mataban y que se momificaban, enterrándolos para que sirvieran de comida al difunto; en trecer lugar estarían los animales sagrados, a los que se momificaba para ofrecerlos como ofrendas a los dioses y en cuatro lugar estarían los animales sagrados que eran omificados cuando morian por causas naturales


foto 1)  y 2) el perro Davis. Museo de El Cairo.

bird mummy

Present location

MUSÉE ROYAL DE MARIEMONT [07/009] MARIEMONT

Inventory number

Ac.2004/2

Dating

PTOLEMAIC PERIOD; ROMAN PERIOD

Archaeological Site

UNKNOWN

Category

BIRD MUMMY

Material

FLAX; UNSPECIFIED

Bibliography

  • Cl. DERRIKS et L. DELVAUX, Antiquités égyptiennes au Musée royal de Mariemont, Morlanwelz, 2009, p. 402.
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domingo, 7 de agosto de 2016

Mummy of a child with two papyri in Greek

Mummy of a child with two papyri in Greek

The mummy of a child. The spinal column of the child is slightly twisted. The fractures in the area of the face and the pelvic region are post-mortem. Some of the bones of the left foot are missing; they may have fallen out of the mummy wrappings. The mineralisation of the bones is in accordance with the child's age (3rd - 4th year).

KUNSTHISTORISCHES MUSEUM

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jueves, 28 de julio de 2016

Mummy of Ramesses the Third



Mummy of Ramesses the Third
The pharaoh Ramesses the Third is considered to have been the last great king of the New Kingdom. He was not the son of Ramesses the Second; his father was Seth-nakhte, the founder of the Twentieth Dynasty.
He was a great admirer of his ancestor Ramesses the Second and he followed in his footsteps, especially as a great warrior and in his building works. He built a great temple on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor called Medinet Habu, and many structures in Karnak and Luxor temples, in Heliopolis, Memphis, Abydos and Hermopolis.
He saved Egypt from an invasion of the so-called "Sea people," who were more dangerous than the Hyksos, and defeated them in a naval battle.
He seems to have died when he was in his sixties as the result of a harem conspiracy; the records of the trial of his murderers still survive.
He was buried in tomb KV 11 in the Valley of the Kings; it had been begun for his father but was abandoned on the latter's early death. Due to the tomb being robbed, the mummy was moved several times by the priests, and the king was reburied three times.
The last tomb was where the mummy was found in the Deir el-Bahari cachette in 1881. His mummy had pierced ears, which was the fashion during this period.
Present location EGYPTIAN MUSEUM [01/001] CAIRO EM
Inventory number CG 61083
Dating RAMESSES III/USERMAATRE-MERIAMUN
Archaeological Site DEIR EL-BAHARI
Category MALE MUMMY
Material ORGANIC
Technique UNSPECIFIED
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Mummy of Tuthmosis the Second

Mummy of Tuthmosis the Second
Tuthmosis the Second was the son of Tuthmosis the First and Mutnefert. He succeeded his father and married his half-sister Hatshepsut. Except for a military campaign against Nubia, little is known of his reign, which lasted for about ten years.
His mummy was presumably violated by tomb robbers. Therefore it was moved to the Deir el-Bahari Cachette, where it was rewrapped and restored. The king, like the other pharaohs, has his hands crossed over his chest, in a pose that continued to be followed in mummies of kings for many generations. X-ray analysis shows that he died in his thirties.
Scabrous patches, rather than a disease, covered his skin, perhaps because of the embalming process. His right leg was completely broken away from the body. Unlike the other royal mummies, his fingers and toe nails were trimmed and clean.
Present location EGYPTIAN MUSEUM [01/001] CAIRO EM
Inventory number JE 26212
Dating TUTHMOSIS II/AAKHEPERENRE
Archaeological Site DEIR EL-BAHARI
Category MALE MUMMY
Material ORGANIC
Technique UNSPECIFIED
Height 168.4 cm
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