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Source Description
The coffin of Bakenmut is one of the finest examples of painted wooden coffins made for the priests of Amen and their families at Thebes during Dynasty 21 and early Dynasty 22. The pharaohs of this time were no longer buried in the Valley of the Kings, but instead built tombs in the Delta, far to the north, where they resided. Security was lax in the Theban necropolis. The coffins and funerary goods of the wealthy citizens of Thebes were placed in unmarked and undecorated family tombs cut into the cliffs on the west bank of the Nile. All the care and detail that in more prosperous times were devoted to the decoration of the tomb chapel were now lavished on the elaborately painted coffins. Every available surface is crowded with religious scenes, images of funerary gods and goddesses, protective spells, and magical symbols. The deceased appears mummiform. An elaborate floral collar entirely covers the upper body, exposing only the separately attached hands (now lost). A pair of red "mummy braces" are crossed over the chest, their point of intersection marked by a winged sun disk. The lower body is covered with tiny figures modeled in gesso against a yellow background, which gives the effect of gold inlaid with glass or semiprecious stone. The decoration on the interior features two deified dead kings of Dynasty 18. Although these rulers had lived centuries before, memory of their greatness was still very much alive. The main scene near the top depicts Tuthmosis III, the great military pharaoh, who lived 500 years before Bakenmut. Posed as a mummy, the ruler wears a brilliant feathered garment enfolding him with falcon’s wings. The scene below features back-to-back seated images of Amenhotep I, regarded as the patron of the Theban cemetery and worshiped as a local god there.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
93986
label
Coffin of Bakenmut (lid)
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
93986
contentType
object
title
Coffin of Bakenmut (lid)
description
The coffin of Bakenmut is one of the finest examples of painted wooden coffins made for the priests of Amen and their families at Thebes during Dynasty 21 and early Dynasty 22. The pharaohs of this time were no longer buried in the Valley of the Kings, but instead built tombs in the Delta, far to the north, where they resided. Security was lax in the Theban necropolis. The coffins and funerary goods of the wealthy citizens of Thebes were placed in unmarked and undecorated family tombs cut into the cliffs on the west bank of the Nile. All the care and detail that in more prosperous times were devoted to the decoration of the tomb chapel were now lavished on the elaborately painted coffins. Every available surface is crowded with religious scenes, images of funerary gods and goddesses, protective spells, and magical symbols. The deceased appears mummiform. An elaborate floral collar entirely covers the upper body, exposing only the separately attached hands (now lost). A pair of red "mummy braces" are crossed over the chest, their point of intersection marked by a winged sun disk. The lower body is covered with tiny figures modeled in gesso against a yellow background, which gives the effect of gold inlaid with glass or semiprecious stone. The decoration on the interior features two deified dead kings of Dynasty 18. Although these rulers had lived centuries before, memory of their greatness was still very much alive. The main scene near the top depicts Tuthmosis III, the great military pharaoh, who lived 500 years before Bakenmut. Posed as a mummy, the ruler wears a brilliant feathered garment enfolding him with falcon’s wings. The scene below features back-to-back seated images of Amenhotep I, regarded as the patron of the Theban cemetery and worshiped as a local god there.
date
c. 1000–900 BCE
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q60761507
genreSpecific
Funerary Equipment
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 68 cm (26 3/4 in.)
cul
Egypt, Thebes, Third Intermediate (1069–715 BCE), Dynasties 21–22
accession
1914.561.b
Source extras
tec
gessoed and painted sycamore fig
tombstone
Coffin of Bakenmut (lid), c. 1000–900 BCE. Egypt, Thebes, Third Intermediate (1069–715 BCE), Dynasties 21–22. Gessoed and painted sycamore fig; overall: 68 cm (26 3/4 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust, 1914.561.b
collection
Egypt - Third Intermediate
formerAccessionNumbers
353.14a
14.561a
didYouKnow
Originally another smaller coffin was placed inside this outer coffin and in that the deceased with a mummy board would have rested.
citations
citation
The Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>Handbook of the Cleveland Museum of Art</em>. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1991.
page_number
Reproduced: p. 4
citation
Berman, Lawrence M., and Kenneth J. Bohač.<em> Catalogue of Egyptian Art: The Cleveland Museum of Art.</em> Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art, 1999
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: P. 314-324, cat. no. 251; reproduced: P. 58-59
citation
May, Sally Ruth. <em>Knockouts: a pocket guide.</em> Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Art, 2001.
page_number
Reproduced: no. 8, p. 12 - 13
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>The CMA Companion: A Guide to the Cleveland Museum of Art</em>. Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Art, 2014.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: P. 74-75
citation
Tedbury, Imogen. "Our Woman in Cairo: Lucy Olcott Perkin's Work as an Agent for the Cleveland Museum of Art." In <em>The Art Market and the Museum: Institutional Collecting, Display and Patronage since the Mid-Nineteenth Century. </em>Edited by Frances Fowle, and MaryKate Cleary, 167-183. London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2025.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 173; Reproduced: pl. 13
creditline
Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust
updatedAt
2026-05-29 04:59:38.502000
sourceId
93986
dept
Egyptian and Ancient Near Eastern Art
coll
Egypt - Third Intermediate
med
gessoed and painted sycamore fig
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
e4a1b3c3bd412872