Skip to main content

Xaiv hom lus

Thaum cov lus qhia tsis muab kev txhais lus hauv koj cov lus, lawv feem ntau txhais los ntawm Google. Txawm li cas los xij, qee cov lus qhia tsuas yog muaj nyob hauv lawv cov lus qub.

Cov ntawv sau tseg

Cov lus piav qhia

  • Model Paddling Boat, Wood, paint, plaster, linen twine, linen fabric

Model Paddling Boat

#3295

ca. 1981–1975 B.C.

Wood, paint, plaster, linen twine, linen fabric

Kev piav qhia

The green color of the hull of this boat, its vertical prow, backward-curving stern and double steering oars imitate elements of vessels made from papyrus stalks. Even the lashings of the leather sheaths that covered prow and stern of such boats are rendered. Boats of this particular type appear in representations of the "pilgrimage to Abydos" that was part of the Egyptian funerary ritual from the Middle Kingdom onwards. The ritual character of this boat trip is clearly demonstrated by the fact that not the living Meketre but a statue sits under the baldaquin accompanied by a companion (possibly his son) and a large libation vessel. The basic idea of a trip to the major cult center of the god Osiris at Abydos, where the god's death and resurrection were celebrated, is however maintained by the presence of two boats: this one that is being paddled northward from Thebes to Abydos against the prevailing wind by sixteen men whose varied sizes and arm positions create an impression of movement along the line, and another that is just setting out on the return trip under sail.

3295. Funerary Boat being Rowed, Part 1

Gallery 105

3685. Funerary Boat being Rowed, Part 2

Cov ntaub ntawv ntxiv

Qhov ntev
L. 132.5 cm (52 3/16 in.), with rudder 138.5 (54 1/2 in.); H. 53 cm (20 7/8 in.); W. 38 cm (14 15/16 in.)
Qhuas
Rogers Fund and Edward S. Harkness Gift, 1920
Tus lej nkag
20.3.5

Software Licenses