A copper alloy votive figure of Osiris on a round wooden base. Margaret Murray dated this to the Thi (cont.)
A figure of Osiris cast in copper alloy with a loop on the back. For a discussion on loops on Osiris (cont.)
Cartonnage covering for the chest area dating to the Ptolemaic Period. At the top is a ba-bird with (cont.)
Copper alloy Osiris figure fragment, perhaps dating to the Thirtieth Dynasty. Gift from the Universi (cont.)
A long panel of cartonnage made of very fine linen and covered with gesso incised with designs and a (cont.)
A fragment of linen shroud decorated with paintings of snakes and a mourning woman. Women rather tha (cont.)
Dark wood sarcophagus fragment dating to the Ptolemaic Period. The fragment represents the end secti (cont.)
EC357 is an end section of a wooden sarcophagus dating to the Ptolemaic Period. Only the exterior fa (cont.)
Sandstone relief or stela showing a procession of gods. The relief has been recut with the images mo (cont.)
Coffin fragment with hieroglyphs inside and out (probably the Book of the Dead). Those inside consis (cont.)
A coffin fragment of painted wood, dating from the Twenty-fifth to the Twenty-sixth Dynasty. It show (cont.)
A coffin fragment from an anthropoid coffin made of painted wood with a yellow background. It is in (cont.)
A votive figure of Osiris. It is heavily corroded, and the feet are missing. Red copper oxide covers (cont.)
This is the head of ceramic statuette wearing a headdress. This is probably depicting Osiris as it h (cont.)
A copper head of Osiris wearing the Atef Crown with uraeus, although the two ostrich feathers are no (cont.)
A stone mould for a figure of Osiris (the figure is mummiform without a headdress). A similar mould (cont.)
A piece of cartonnage with the mummiform dead, Nephthys and Isis on either side. The canopic jars wi (cont.)
A section of cartonnage showing a jackal-headed god, likely Anubis, in front of an offering table wi (cont.)
This object is part of a limestone mould for votive Osiris figure, probably dating to the Graeco-Rom (cont.)