Figure
Item number M3.190 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number M3.190 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Ushabti figure representing a mummy wearing a nemes headdress (striped head cloth) with a chin beard and crossed arms, and holding a sceptre in each hand. The body of the figure is carved with eight rows of hieroglyphs, and the figure is standing on a square base. A vertical band of hieroglyphs extends down the back of the figure. The figure is glazed with light green in some areas.
Ushabti are tomb figurines, they accompany the deceased as a servant in the afterlife.
Collected by H. V. S. Page, who said it was from the tomb of an Egyptian General, Ankh-uah-ab-ra-sa-nit.
Egyptian faience was made by mixing quartz sand that had been powdered with an alkaline material, such as potash, and natron, a mineral containing sodium. When the mixture was heated to a sufficiently high temperature, a shiny surface formed. If copper was present in the mix, the surface would be a turquoise colour.
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Collected by H. V. S. Page, who said it was from the tomb of an Egyptian General, Ankh-uah-ab-ra-sa-nit.
Egyptian faience was made by mixing quartz sand that had been powdered with an alkaline material, such as potash, and natron, a mineral containing sodium. When the mixture was heated to a sufficiently high temperature, a shiny surface formed. If copper was present in the mix, the surface would be a turquoise colour.
Ushabti figure representing a mummy wearing a nemes headdress (striped head cloth) with a chin beard and crossed arms, and holding a sceptre in each hand. The body of the figure is carved with eight rows of hieroglyphs, and the figure is standing on a square base. A vertical band of hieroglyphs extends down the back of the figure. The figure is glazed with light green in some areas.
Ushabti are tomb figurines, they accompany the deceased as a servant in the afterlife.
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