Ancient Egypt Rediscovered. Ongoing. At the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburg, Scotland

Ancient Egypt Rediscovered. Ongoing. At the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburg, Scotland. This new gallery showcases the depth and breadth of the National Museums' Ancient Egypt collection that originated with the first Egyptian objects added in 1819. Highlights will include the Qurna burial, the only intact royal burial group outside of Egypt, a gold ring said to have belonged to Queen Nefertiti and a unique double coffin of two half-brothers, Petamun and Penhorpabik. The gallery is also planned to house the only white limestone casing stone from the Great Pyramid of Giza outside of Egypt that was discovered in a rubble heap by British engineer Waynman Dixon in 1872.


Pendant of gold depicting an “upside-down catfish”, with an unknown core (possibly copper alloy) and a ring for suspension in its mouth: Ancient Egyptian, excavated by Petrie in Tomb 72 in Harageh Cemetery A, Late Middle Kingdom, 12th Dynasty, c.1862-1750 BCE .


Box of cedar wood with ebony veneers and ivory inlays and gilding depicting the god Bes and bearing the cartouches of Amenhotep II: Ancient Egyptian, New Kingdom, 18th Dynasty, c.1550-1295 BC.

Images courtesy of the National Museum of Scotland.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Imperial Italic G Roman helmet found near Hebron at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem

A Brief History of Ships' Eyes

Roman and Byzantine mosaics at the Haleplibahçe Mosaics Museum in Şanlıurfa, Turkey.