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Coffin of Ta-mit (Lid)

Coffin of Ta-mit (Lid)

Artist: Unidentified
Period: Late Period (Ancient Egyptian, 664–332 BCE)
Dynasty: Dynasty 26 (Saite) (Ancient Egyptian, 664–525 BCE)
Date: about 600-550 BCE
Dimensions:
13 1/4 × 19 7/8 × 70 7/16 in. (33.7 × 50.5 × 178.9 cm)
Medium: sycamore wood, mud, paint, and beeswax
Place of Origin: possibly from Luxor, Egypt
Classification: Mummies and Mummy Cases
Credit Line: Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number: 1906.1A
Label Text:Originally containing the mummy of the woman Ta-mit, this coffin ensured her successful transition to the afterlife. Her green face refers to the god Osiris, who oversaw the annual cycle of the death and rebirth of vegetation, and the rebirth of human beings.

The coffin’s front shows the sky goddess Nut (NOOT)— also depicted on the coffin’s interior—who protectively spreads her wings around Ta-mit. Just below, a host of gods and goddesses watch Ta-mit’s heart being weighed against the feather of truth. (Derived from the Book of the Dead, the scene is also depicted in the Scroll of Tamesia, located in a case to your right.)

Just below the weighing of the heart, Ta-mit’s mummy reclines on a funerary couch. Rising from her body is a human-headed bird—her ba—one of the immortal forms of the soul. Beneath her are four canopic jars, containers that protect her internal organs, which closely resemble the real ones displayed at the coffin’s feet.

DescriptionCoffin lid.
On view