Canopic Jar and Lid (Depicting a Hawk)

664–525 B.C.E., or later

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Object Label

Canopic jars first appeared in the tomb of Hetepheres, the mother of Khufu, builder of the Great Pyramid. They were intended to hold the separately mummified internal organs. The middle-class examples of canopic jars, which first appeared seven hundred years later, are often dummies like these, never hollowed out to hold the organs, but still included in the tomb. Canopic jars demonstrate the development of a custom at a royal cemetery that was then adopted in a cheaper form by the middle class.

Caption

Canopic Jar and Lid (Depicting a Hawk), 664–525 B.C.E., or later. Limestone, 10 1/2 × Diam. 5 in. (26.7 × 12.7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 37.895Ea-b. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)

Title

Canopic Jar and Lid (Depicting a Hawk)

Date

664–525 B.C.E., or later

Dynasty

Dynasty 26

Period

Late Period

Geography

Place made: Egypt

Medium

Limestone

Classification

Funerary Object

Dimensions

10 1/2 × Diam. 5 in. (26.7 × 12.7 cm)

Credit Line

Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund

Accession Number

37.895Ea-b

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