Coffin Panel with Paintings of Funerary Scenes | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Coffin Panel with Paintings of Funerary Scenes

İsim Coffin Panel with Paintings of Funerary Scenes
Basım Tarihi: 1070-945 BCE (Third Intermediate Period)
Basım Yeri - The Walters Art Museum
Konu Culture: Egyptian | more | less
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Dimensions: 74 x 19 x 8 15/16 in. (188 x 48.3 x 22.7 cm)
Kütüphane: Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 62.2
Kayıt Numarası walters-38642
Lokasyon The Walters Art Museum
Tarih 1070-945 BCE (Third Intermediate Period)
Notlar This panel is from a human-shaped coffin ensemble typically used for the priests of Amun at Thebes, who ruled there during the 21st Dynasty. These wooden coffin groupings usually consisted of two nesting coffins with lids and a mummy board carved to resemble the deceased and placed directly on top of the mummy. The panel is from the exterior right side of the inner container. During the 21st Dynasty, both the interior and exterior of coffins were decorated with amuletic symbols, short texts, and small, highly colored scenes that covered every inch of the surface. The owner of the coffin, not named on the panel, is depicted as a woman in one of the painted scenes. By the 21st Dynasty, decorated chapels and tombs were no longer used. Instead, burials took place in unmarked rock-cut chambers, probably to deter tomb robbers. Religious scenes that had once appeared on tomb walls were now painted on coffins and papyri. The panel is divided into three zones. The upper zone displays uraeus serpents, symbolizing protection, and Maat feathers representing the concepts of justice, truth, and divine order. The second zone contains a religious text, and the main zone below has different sections with representations of Osiris as well as the sun god in their shrines and scared places. The union of the mythologies of Osiris and the solar god Re is significant, as each set of beliefs, both concerned with resurrection and rebirth, was thought to benefit the deceased in their journey through the underworld. For the latest information about this object, panels; coffins, visit art.thewalters.org. | Dynasty: 21st Dynasty | Inscriptions: | Reign: | Style: | more | less
Parçası Olduğu EGY | Ancient Art
Malzeme wood with polychrome paint and varnish
Kaynağa git Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi Digital Library of the Middle East
Digital Library of the Middle East Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kaynağa git

Coffin Panel with Paintings of Funerary Scenes

Basım Tarihi 1070-945 BCE (Third Intermediate Period)
Basım Yeri - The Walters Art Museum
Konu Culture: Egyptian | more | less
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Dimensions: 74 x 19 x 8 15/16 in. (188 x 48.3 x 22.7 cm)
Kütüphane Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 62.2
Kayıt Numarası walters-38642
Lokasyon The Walters Art Museum
Tarih 1070-945 BCE (Third Intermediate Period)
Notlar This panel is from a human-shaped coffin ensemble typically used for the priests of Amun at Thebes, who ruled there during the 21st Dynasty. These wooden coffin groupings usually consisted of two nesting coffins with lids and a mummy board carved to resemble the deceased and placed directly on top of the mummy. The panel is from the exterior right side of the inner container. During the 21st Dynasty, both the interior and exterior of coffins were decorated with amuletic symbols, short texts, and small, highly colored scenes that covered every inch of the surface. The owner of the coffin, not named on the panel, is depicted as a woman in one of the painted scenes. By the 21st Dynasty, decorated chapels and tombs were no longer used. Instead, burials took place in unmarked rock-cut chambers, probably to deter tomb robbers. Religious scenes that had once appeared on tomb walls were now painted on coffins and papyri. The panel is divided into three zones. The upper zone displays uraeus serpents, symbolizing protection, and Maat feathers representing the concepts of justice, truth, and divine order. The second zone contains a religious text, and the main zone below has different sections with representations of Osiris as well as the sun god in their shrines and scared places. The union of the mythologies of Osiris and the solar god Re is significant, as each set of beliefs, both concerned with resurrection and rebirth, was thought to benefit the deceased in their journey through the underworld. For the latest information about this object, panels; coffins, visit art.thewalters.org. | Dynasty: 21st Dynasty | Inscriptions: | Reign: | Style: | more | less
Parçası Olduğu EGY | Ancient Art
Malzeme wood with polychrome paint and varnish
Digital Library of the Middle East
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