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Source Description

Linen bandages were used during the mummification process from the Late through the Ptolemaic period, ca. 6th-2nd centuries BCE. They were usually decorated with spells and sometimes vignettes from the "Book of the Dead" in order to deliver the desired magical protection for the deceased. The practice of placing inscribed bandages directly on the body of the dead person was essential to securing a good life for the deceased in the Netherworld.This small strip of fabric is woven of high-quality linen and belongs to the well-known object group of inscribed mummification bandages. The originally light beige linen is now discolored to a darker brown. Both side ends of the bandage are lost and irregularly torn off. The original length is unknown, but might have extended to ¾ of an Egyptian cubit (= 39.15 cm = 15 3/8 in.). The inscription is composed in hieratic script and rendered in black ink (made of soot mixed with gelatin, gum, and bee wax); the color has slightly faded. The text consists of three lines; the beginnings and ends of the sentences are missing; but the losses seem to be minor judging by content and grammar.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
79099
label
Mummification Bandage of Userwer
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
79099
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Mummification Bandage of Userwer
description
Linen bandages were used during the mummification process from the Late through the Ptolemaic period, ca. 6th-2nd centuries BCE. They were usually decorated with spells and sometimes vignettes from the "Book of the Dead" in order to deliver the desired magical protection for the deceased. The practice of placing inscribed bandages directly on the body of the dead person was essential to securing a good life for the deceased in the Netherworld.This small strip of fabric is woven of high-quality linen and belongs to the well-known object group of inscribed mummification bandages. The originally light beige linen is now discolored to a darker brown. Both side ends of the bandage are lost and irregularly torn off. The original length is unknown, but might have extended to ¾ of an Egyptian cubit (= 39.15 cm = 15 3/8 in.). The inscription is composed in hieratic script and rendered in black ink (made of soot mixed with gelatin, gum, and bee wax); the color has slightly faded. The text consists of three lines; the beginnings and ends of the sentences are missing; but the losses seem to be minor judging by content and grammar.
provenance
[Found in the cemetery of Giza by an expedition of Egyptian archaeologists in the 1950s]; Professor Dr. Abd el Monem Abubakr, Cairo, Giza University, 1950s, by discovery; Professor Dr. Hans Goedicke, Baltimore, 1957, by official gift [for his assistance in the deciphering of some texts from the excavation at Giza]; Walters Art Museum, 2009, by gift.
date
ca. 399-343 BCE (Late Period, 29th-30th dynasty)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Textiles
mummy wrappings
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
6.5
height
28.5
dimensionsRaw
H: 2 9/16 × W: 11 1/4 in. (6.5 × 28.5 cm)
Source extras
cul
Egyptian
inscriptions
[Translation] (1) (…who satisfies) the Two Gods
the count
chief
treasurer
unique friend
priest of Isis of Coptos
priest of Osiris
Min-Horus (…) (2) (…) May you grant the sweet breath to Wsir-wer of Netjeru-of-the-North
who satisfies the Two Gods
the count
chief
treasurer
(unique) friend (…)(3) (…May you grant the) sweet (breath) to Wsir-wer of Netjeru-of-the-North
who satisfies the Two Gods
the count
chief
treasurer
unique friend (…)
dynasty
29th-30th Dynasty
med
black ink on linen
creator_ids
6182
collection_ids
EGY
exhibition_ids
3193
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
15cbff18aa65bb49