Ushebti; Egypt, Lower Epoch, 664-323 B.C.
Bronze.
It belonged to the collection of Dr. Diaz Martos (60's-70's), author of the book "Roman Corinthian Capitals of Hispania".
Measurements: 14.2 cm (height).
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
Ushebti; Egypt, Lower Epoch, 664-323 BC.
Bronze.
It belonged to the collection of Dr. Diaz Martos (60's-70's), author of the book "Roman Corinthian Capitals of Hispania".
Measurements: 14.2 cm (height).
The ushebtis are small statuettes that were deposited in the tombs as part of the funerary trousseau of the deceased. The oldest preserved specimens come from the Middle Empire, although we already find references to them in texts from the end of the Ancient Empire. Throughout time they always maintained the same function in the religious sphere but, while during the Middle Empire they were conceived as the representation of their owner before Osiris in the tasks of farming in the kingdom of the shadows, replicas of the deceased, from the New Empire onwards they came to be seen as servants or slaves of the deceased, being made in large quantities.
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