Cartonnage covering for the chest area dating to the Ptolemaic Period. At the top is a ba-bird with (cont.)
A lid of a canopic jar with the head of a baboon, which represents the god Hapy. It is made of wood (cont.)
A limestone lid of a canopic jar depicting the god Hapy with black painted eyes. Its ears are missin (cont.)
A string of blue, tubular, faience beads with a blue circle bead and a circular label with a serrate (cont.)
String of blue, tubular, faience beads with amulet of Hapy and an orange glass bead. The necklace is (cont.)
String of blue, tubular, faience beads with an amulet of Hapy. The necklace is re-strung. Hapy was o (cont.)
An amulet of Hapy, one of the Sons of Horus, which has been damaged and repaired. Two holes are pres (cont.)
Amulet of Hapy broken into two pieces. Hapy is one of the Four Sons of Horus. The holes in the amule (cont.)
A flat faience Hapy amulet that has been broken in half and repaired. The holes allow the amulet to (cont.)
A flat faience Hapy amulet (one of the Sons of Horus with a baboon head). It is engraved on both sid (cont.)
Flat black faience Hapy amulet. Amulets of the Four Sons of Horus were placed in mummy wrappings fro (cont.)
A string of blue/green faience tubular beads with an amulet of Hapy, one of the Four Sons of Horus r (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.)
A section of cartonnage showing two deities, possibly two of the Sons of Horus (one of which has the (cont.)
An amulet of Hapy, one of the Four Sons of Horus. Hapy protected the lungs of the deceased. He is sh (cont.)
A section of a shroud with a painted scene depicting the mummy of dead woman, Tashay, lying on a lio (cont.)
A section of a shroud showing Tashay revived by Isis, shown both in human form and as a falcon. The (cont.)
This section of linen is decorated with a hieratic text of Chapters 148 and 149 from the 'Book of th (cont.)
A section of a cartonnage body piece showing the Four Sons of Horus.