Artwork Page for Canopic Jar with Baboon's Head (lid)

Details / Information for Canopic Jar with Baboon's Head (lid)

Canopic Jar with Baboon's Head (lid)

664–525 BCE
Measurements
Diameter: 18.2 cm (7 3/16 in.); Diameter of mouth: 9.6 cm (3 3/4 in.); Overall: 40.8 cm (16 1/16 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
107 Egyptian

Description

In the process of mummification, the liver, lungs, stomach, and intestines were removed, separately embalmed, and stored in specialized jars known as canopic jars (after a sailor in Greek mythology, who died at the town of Canopus in the Nile Delta and was worshipped there in the form of a human-headed jar). Each organ was identified with one of four funerary deities collectively known as the Sons of Horus: the liver with Imsety (man's head), the lungs with Hapy (baboon's head), the stomach with Duamutef (jackal's head), and the intestines with Qebehsenuef (falcon's head). It was their duty to protect the deceased and restore to him his body parts in the hereafter.
A cream and tan travertine stone sculpture resembles a stylized baboon's head, functioning as a rounded lid. Facing left, the head features a prominent muzzle and almond-shaped eyes outlined with shallow carvings. Smooth, horizontal layers of stone wrap around the form. The sculpture sits on a thick, circular base meant for a vessel, with a small chip visible on the bottom front edge.

Canopic Jar with Baboon's Head (lid)

664–525 BCE

Egypt, Late period (715–332 BCE), Dynasty 26

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