LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: chest

Canopic Chest in the Brooklyn Museum, August 2007

15 Sep 2007 513
Canopic Chest Painted Wood Late Period - Ptolemaic Period, circa 380-30 BC from Saqqara Accession # 37.1390E Some of the internal organs removed during mummification embalmed and placed in vessels called canopic jars. These jars in turn were placed in containers like this called canopic chests. The organs and their containers were identified with deities known as the Four Sons of Horus, two of whom appear on the left side of this chest and the other two on the right. Together with the rituals accompanying it, each step of the process of mummification was thought to help transform the corpse into a more-than-human body for its no-longer-human owner. Text from the Brooklyn Museum label.

Canopic Chest in the Brooklyn Museum, August 2007

15 Sep 2007 909
Canopic Chest Painted Wood Late Period - Ptolemaic Period, circa 380-30 BC from Saqqara Accession # 37.1390E Some of the internal organs removed during mummification embalmed and placed in vessels called canopic jars. These jars in turn were placed in containers like this called canopic chests. The organs and their containers were identified with deities known as the Four Sons of Horus, two of whom appear on the left side of this chest and the other two on the right. Together with the rituals accompanying it, each step of the process of mummification was thought to help transform the corpse into a more-than-human body for its no-longer-human owner. Text from the Brooklyn Museum label.

Canopic Chest in the Brooklyn Museum, August 2007

15 Sep 2007 422
Canopic Chest Painted Wood Late Period - Ptolemaic Period, circa 380-30 BC from Saqqara Accession # 37.1390E Some of the internal organs removed during mummification embalmed and placed in vessels called canopic jars. These jars in turn were placed in containers like this called canopic chests. The organs and their containers were identified with deities known as the Four Sons of Horus, two of whom appear on the left side of this chest and the other two on the right. Together with the rituals accompanying it, each step of the process of mummification was thought to help transform the corpse into a more-than-human body for its no-longer-human owner. Text from the Brooklyn Museum label.