Gilded outer coffin of
Henutmehyt
From the tomb of Henutmehyt, Thebes,
Egypt
19th Dynasty, around 1250
BC
The chantress of Amun, a high-ranking lady of
the later New Kingdom
The coffins of Henutmehyt, originally placed
one inside the other, were all anthropoid (human-shaped). Like
tomb-statues, this type of coffin was believed to provide the
spirit with a substitute body if the mummy should perish. The
physical form, with crossed arms, together with the inscriptions
and the figures of protective gods and goddesses all emphasized the
identification of the dead person with the god
Osiris.
The implication was that, like him, they might experience
resurrection.
Henutmehyt's
outer coffin provides a magnificent idealized image of the dead
woman, adorned with her full wig. A collar is spread over the
breast, and below it hangs a pectoral (chest) ornament flanked by
protective
wedjat
eyes. The sky-goddess
Nut
spreads her winged arms protectively across the body, and the
hieroglyphic
text immediately below invokes
her.
Vertical and
horizontal bands divide the remainder of the lid into compartments
which are occupied by figures of the
Sons of
Horus and the goddesses
Isis
and
Nephthys.
Further divine figures are painted along the sides of the
coffin.
T. Potts, Civilization: ancient treasure, exh. cat. (Canberra, Australian National Gallery, 1990)
J.H. Taylor, Studies in Egyptian antiquitie, British Museum Occasional Paper 123 (, 1999)
J.H. Taylor, Egyptian coffins (Aylesbury, Shire Publications, 1989)