Monday, 10 June 2019

Highlights of the Egypt Centre: Results!

This past Wednesday, as part of Volunteers’ Week, we announced the results of our selection process for the highlights of the Egypt Centre. Voters were asked to select up to fifteen objects currently on display in each of our galleries (House of Death and House of Life). While many of the objects selected were expected, we were surprised by some of the objects that missed out. From the House of Death, a Greek mummy label (W549), stela of Isis-Thermouthis and Serapis-Agathadaimon (W56), and the head of an unidentified Ptolemaic queen (W194) were just some of the objects that weren’t selected (fig. 1). In the House of Life, the lintel of Tjenti (W491) and the painted plaster fragment of Akhenaten’s elbow (W802), two objects that featured in recent blogs, missed out.  


Fig. 1: Unidentified Ptolemaic Queen (W194)

The chosen objects from each gallery is as follows.

Objects from the House of Death (fig. 2) are:
Number
EC number
Title
1
W1982
Coffin of the Chantress of Amun, Iwesemhesetmut
2
W867
Book of Dead papyrus of Ankh-hapi
3
W1013
Cartonnage coffin with foetus
4
W164
5
W379
Overseer shabti of Ptahhotep
6
AB110
Cippus
7
W1283
Bes pot
8
W529
Cat mummy mask
9
W927
Khabekhenet wall relief
10
W429
Ba-bird
11
W918
Gilded cartonnage mask
12
W1041
Edfu stela of Pasherienimhotep
13
W481
Pottery offering tray
14
W1377Eighteenth Dynasty Theban tomb painting
15
W1367a & b
Sarcophagus fragments of Amenhotep son of Hapu


Fig. 2: Objects from the House of Death

Objects from the House of Life (fig. 3) consist of:

Number
EC number
Title
16
W581
Middle Kingdom battle axe
17
W277
Carnelian anklet with snake heads
18
W1376
19
W921
Statue of Aba
20
W957
Paneb’s offering stand
21
W946 bis
Commodus stela
22
W9
Amarna collar with Beset
23
AR50/3540
Miniature Quran
24
W500
Faience wall tiles
25
W793
Amethyst scarab bracelet
26
W769
27
W5308
D-Ware pot
28
WK44
Bes bell
29
W967
Book of Esther
30
W952


Fig. 3: Objects from the House of Life

We are grateful to the 108 people who participated in the selection process over the past five weeks. Over the coming months, those highlights that haven’t already featured on this blog will be presented. Additionally, Dulcie Engel, one of our volunteers, will be writing a short catalogue entry for each of the objects, which will form part of a small booklet featuring these thirty highlights!

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