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Hand Axe

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Hand Axe

Period Upper Paleolithic Period (Ancient Egyptian, 40,000-10,000 BCE)
Place of OriginEgypt, Luxor, Deir el-Bahari
DateUpper Paleolithic Period (40,000-10,000 BCE)
Dimensions4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm)
MediumChert (flint)
ClassificationUtilitarian Objects
Credit LineGift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number
1906.207C
Not on View
Label TextCarefully chipped from larger pieces of flint, hand axes are among the earliest objects made in Egypt. Nomadic hunters in the Paleolithic Period used these hand-held axes as their principal tool. Pointed axes served as weapons to kill and butcher game.Published ReferencesCatalogue of a Collection of Egyptian Antiquities Brought Together and Presented to the Toledo Museum of Art by Mr. Edward Drummond Libbey, Toledo, Toledo Museum of Art, 1906, p. 35, no. 207 ("silex axe heads").

Hand Axe
Unidentified
Upper Paleolithic Period (40,000-10,000 BCE)
Hand Axe
Unidentified
Upper Paleolithic Period (40,000-10,000 BCE)
Hand Axe
Unidentified
Upper Paleolithic Period (40,000-10,000 BCE)
Hand Axe
Unidentified
Upper Paleolithic Period (40,000-10,000 BCE)
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Box for Shabtis for As-ankh, singer of Amun-Re
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Hippopotamus-Shaped Cosmetic Palette
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Lamp with Floating Female Figure
Unidentified
1st-2nd century CE

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