Record

Bowl

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from Qurneh, Egypt

Postcard of Bowl.
000-180-001-481-C
© National Museums Scotland

Bowl

This marble bowl is among a number of grave goods placed in the rich burial of a woman and child at Qurneh in Egypt, sometime in the 17th Dynasty. It was found within a basket containing a horn, bronze cutter, sharpening stone, flints and a ball of thread.

The bowl, here pictured upside down, has an incurved rim and a base rim formed by the tails of four apes whose bodies are carved on the bowl.

During the time of the burial, Egypt was politically divided, with Thebes as the centre of one of several Egyptian kingdoms. Qurneh was the burial place of the kings and queens of Thebes in the 17th Dynasty. This fact, together with the rich grave goods, suggests that the woman may have been a queen.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-180-001-481-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0504: National Museums Scotland Part 2
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  A.1909.527.33
Date: 17th Dynasty
2nd Intermediate Period: 17th Dynasty (around 1641 to 1539 BC)
Material:
Dimensions: 128 mm D
What:
Subject: Cosmetics
Who: Professor W.M. Flinders Petrie (Excavator)
Where: Ancient Egypt, Qurneh
Event:
Description: Bowl in blue anhydrite with an incurved rim and a base rim formed by the tails of four apes whose bodies are carved on the bowl: Ancient Egyptian, excavated at Qurneh, 17th Dynasty
References:
  • Petrie, W. M. Flinders. Qurneh. London: School of Archaeology in Egypt, 1909. 
  • Qurneh / by W.M. Flinders Petrie. London, B.S.A.E. & B. Quaritch, 1909, 6 - 10 
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