Worker Shabti of Nany, Upper Egypt
Резюме
Shabti dolls were funerary figures in ancient Egypt that accompanied the deceased to the after-life. Shabti's name is derived from the Egyptian swb for stick but also corresponds to the word for `answer' (wsb) and so the shabtis were known as `The Answerers'.
The figures, shaped as adult male or female mummies, appear in tombs early on (when they represented the deceased) and, by the time of the New Kingdom (1570-1069 BCE) were made of stone or wood (in the Late Period they were composed of faience) and represented an anonymous `worker'. Each doll was inscribed with a `spell' (known as the shabti formula) which specified the function of that particular figure.
Ничего не найдено.
Тэги
египетское искусство
фаянс
скульптура
шабти
Фивы
верхний Египет
рабочий шабти
Фонд Роджерса
сверхвысокое разрешение
высокое разрешение
3 д объект
древний Египет
женский портрет
Метрополитен-музей
искусство африки
Дата
0000
Источник
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ссылка
Информация о правах
Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication ("CCO 1.0 Dedication")