White faience beads segmented with horizontal flat shell spacers. Restrund in modern times. Jeweller (cont.)
Copper alloy Osiris figure fragment, perhaps dating to the Thirtieth Dynasty. Gift from the Universi (cont.)
An ovate bifacial flint tool which appears to be a fragment of a knife with the remains of the corte (cont.)
This is the middle section of a bifacial knife, brownish-pink in colour. It is an unstratified find (cont.)
A pottery soul house with square doorway containing four piercings through the architrave. It dates (cont.)
An oblate copper alloy mirror with a handle topped with a Hathor head. Likely dating to the Middle K (cont.)
A fragment of a magical ivory wand, carved on one face with incised figures of animals, including a (cont.)
A roughly carved, round-topped Second Intermediate Period limestone funerary stela of the dignitary (cont.)
Copper alloy axehead or adze. Middle Kingdom. Purchased by Wellcome at auction in 1907 from the coll (cont.)
Pale blue faience object, tubular with horizontal dark stripes. Possibly a lamp feeder, although it (cont.)
Base of stone statue with only the front of the feet rested on a plinth preserved. Stylistically, th (cont.)
Fifty-three spherical beads made of blue faience, green jasper, and blue glass, some loosely re-stru (cont.)
A string of pendants of blue and spacers of black, blue and green faience and stone. There are five (cont.)
A string of green faience beads, likely dating to the Middle Kingdom.
A beaded necklace of coloured stone or faience, likely dating to the Middle Kingdom.
This small bowl is a so-called "hemispherical cup", one of the most typical forms for the Egyptian M (cont.)
A miniature pottery coffin lid covered with a thin white wash. The shape suggests this is in imitati (cont.)
A fragment of a red pottery offering tray. On the base there are strong impressions of the grass upo (cont.)
A red pottery rectangular offering tray, which is possibly from Esna. This item has a raised central (cont.)
A fragment of a red pottery rectangular offering tray. Trays such as these were placed above the gra (cont.)