The
jars, found in a Kushite tomb, once held viscera. Excavators at a tomb in Luxor
have found four canopic jars from the 26th Dynasty, dedicated to “the lady of
the house Amenirdis.”. Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
The
discovery was made by an Egyptian-American mission led by Elena Pischikova and
Fathy Yassin during conservation work carried out by the South Assasif
Conservation Project in the Kushite tomb of Karabasken, a priest. The
tomb is located in the south Asasif Necropolis on Luxor’s west bank.
Mostafa
Waziri, the secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, told Ahram
Online that the jars were found in situ in an intrusive burial compartment cut
into the south wall of the pillared hall of the tomb (TT391). They
were found in a 50cm-deep space in the floor.
“Although the jars are in situ in
a very good conservation condition, they had fallen over the time under the
pressure of flood water and one of them was broken into several fragments,”
Waziri said, adding that emergency cleaning and consolidation were carried out
by the ministry’s conservators.
Pischikova
said that the jars are hollow inside and probably held viscera. “Although
the contents of the jars were damaged by floodwater they still contain a large
amount of resin,” she told Ahram Online.
The
sizes of the lidded jars vary from 35.5 to 39.4cm and each one bears
inscriptions to “the lady of the house Amenirdis,” arranged in two vertical
columns and one horizontal line.
The
formula is indicative of the 26th dynasty.
The lids are in the shapes of a man, a baboon, a jackal and a falcon,
and were skilfully carved by at least three different artists.
The
South Asasif Conservation Project is an Egyptian-American mission working under
the auspices of the Ministry of Antiquities.
The
project was founded in 2006 with the aim of restoring and reconstructing the
damaged and partially collapsed Late Period tombs of the South Asasif
necropolis, Karabasaken (TT 391), Karakhamun (TT 223) and Irtieru (TT 390).
During its 12 years of work the project has
found thousands of fragments of tomb decoration and reconstructed the Second
Pillared hall and part of the First Pillared hall in the tomb of Karakhamun.
"The restored tombs will feature sophisticated relief
carving and painting of the 25th and 26th dynasties," Pischikova said.
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