Wednesday, December 28, 2016

detail from the stela of Haya, XIX Dynasty; now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien...
Haya pouring water on the offerings (represented upon the 'Ka'-standard serving as an offering table) and burning incense before Osiris enthroned; behind Him, Isis, Horus son of Osiris, and Upuaut

Jerk Thoth in the shape of a bird wearing a crown Atef Alaepas
Wood, silver, glass and plaster
Late Period
Vienna Museum

Plaque funeral of two sisters Kitty and syenite
And both of which are shown Mottagabeltan smell the lotus flower, a symbol of immortality,
And before them full of offerings table,
As it becomes apparent from the elegance of what Tertdianh robe beautiful design
State Central Family 12
Around 1900 BC
Colored limestone
Vienna Museum

Double the size of the statue in the nearly normal-sized king (Horemheb) and Idol (Re-Hor sister)
Both are wearing the double crown was the jerk took the side of the King right arm.
State Modern Family 18
About 1,400 BC
Limestone
Vienna Museum

Coffin luxurious stone diorite harsh
The invited (NYSE Shu Tefnut)
The unique design is unprecedented is not simulated body shape, not Homtwazy rectangles,
But the bottom ends of the base less space from the top and a circular curvature Ghraib
Ptolemaic period
Anonymous discovery place

Saturday, July 25, 2015

SPORTS & LEISURE

Swimming was an important part of Egyptian culture and children were taught to swim when very young. Water sports played a significant role in Egyptian entertainment as the Nile River was such a major aspect of their daily lives. The sport of water-jousting, in which two small boats, each with one or two rowers and one jouster, fought each other, seems to have been very popular. The rower (or rowers) in the boat sought to strategically maneuver while the fighter tried to knock his opponent out of the craft.  They also enjoyed games having nothing to do with the river, however, which were similar to modern-day games of catch and handball.
Egyptian Hunting in the Marshes
Egyptian Hunting in the Marshes

Gardens and simple home adornments were highly prized by the Egyptians. A home garden was important for sustenance but also provided pleasure in tending to one’s own crop. The labourers in the fields never worked their own crop and so their individual garden was a place of pride in producing something of their own, grown from their own soil. This soil, again, would be their eternal home after they left their bodies and so was greatly valued. A tomb inscription from 1400 BCE reads, “May I walk every day on the banks of the water, may my soul rest on the branches of the trees which I planted, may I refresh myself under the shadow of my sycamore” in referencing the eternal aspect of the daily surroundings of every Egyptian. After death, one would still enjoy one’s own particular sycamore tree, one’s own daily walk by the water, in an eternal land of peace granted to those of Egypt by the gods they gratefully revered.

Anubis – God of Death

Anubis was the god of embalming and a god of the dead. He was the son of Nephthys and either Osiris or Seth but Isis raised him. Anubis’ depictions show him as either a man with a jackal’s head or as a jackal. He presided over funerals and guided the souls of the dead through the Tuat to Osiris’ kingdom. He also oversaw the ceremony where the gods weighed a human heart to make sure there was a fair judgment. Anubis became the god of embalming after he helped embalm and preserve Osiris’ body.
List of pharaohs Wikipedia 2016

The four sons of Hor

 The four sons of Hor They are responsible for preserving the body parts of the deceased The first: My head is watery .... special for the l...