Artwork Page for Canopic Jar with Falcon's Head (lid)

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Canopic Jar with Falcon's Head (lid)

664–525 BCE
Public Domain
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Location
107 Egyptian
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The falcon-headed deity Qebehsenuef protected the contents of this canopic jar. It contained the remains of the deceased's intestines, which were kept safe for the afterlife.

Description

In the process of mummification, the liver, lungs, stomach, and intestines were removed, separately embalmed, and stored in specialized jars known as canopic jars (after a sailor in Greek mythology, who died at the town of Canopus in the Nile Delta and was worshipped there in the form of a human-headed jar). Each organ was identified with one of four funerary deities collectively known as the Sons of Horus: the liver with Imsety (man's head), the lungs with Hapy (baboon's head), the stomach with Duamutef (jackal's head), and the intestines with Qebehsenuef (falcon's head). It was their duty to protect the deceased and restore to him his body parts in the hereafter.
A cream-colored travertine sculpture depicts a falcon's head facing left. Its rounded head features small circular eyes and a slightly worn beak, while a smooth shroud wraps toward the back. Horizontal bands of tan and cream stripe the stone, including one passing through the eye. The bottom edge is rough and chipped, revealing a smaller circular base underneath that functions as a lid.

Canopic Jar with Falcon's Head (lid)

664–525 BCE

Egypt, Late period (715–332 BCE), Dynasty 26

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