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Link to original content: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/13.180.34a
 Large storage jar with floral decoration | Work of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Large storage jar with floral decoration

Period: Ptolemaic Period

Date: late 3rd–2nd century B.C.

Geography: From Egypt, Upper Egypt, Thebes, Asasif, Birabi, grave 36, MMA excavations, 1912–13

Medium: Pottery, paint

Dimensions: H. 62 cm (24 7/16 in.); Diam. 48 cm (18 7/8 in.)

Credit Line: Rogers Fund and Edward S. Harkness Gift, 1913

Accession Number: 13.180.34a

Description

This large jar typifies a type of painted floral decoration characteristic of the Late Period into the Ptolemaic Period at Thebes. The bowl (13.180.34b) was used base downward as a lid in the mouth of the jar. The large jars usually held solid funerary offerings, such as dates, grain and various kinds of seeds, or, alternatively, mummification materials; analysis indicates the bowl originally contained some thick liquid with containing bovine cellulose, perhaps a thick beef broth or jelly?



The jar was found by the Museum's Egyptian Expedition in an area of brick-vaulted Ptolemaic tombs over the area of Hatshepsut's Valley Temple. The tombs were partly sunk beneath the ground but the vaults were above ground. At the ground entrance there would be a small vestibule or open entrance area. Sometimes vessels were found in twosomes or groups at he entrance; this particular example was found beside a second standing in soil partly below the level of an adjacent stone floor, but any tomb superstructure and the actual burial were missing.

Link to a blog about Ptolemaic Art at The Met
Nile and Newcomers: A Fresh Installation of Egyptian Ptolemaic Art

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