Green jasper heart scarab of King
Sobekemsaf
From the tomb of King Sobekemsaf, Thebes,
Egypt
17th Dynasty, around 1590
BC
A human-headed scarab set in a gold
mount
This is among the earliest heart scarabs known,
and the first that is known to have belonged to an Egyptian king.
It may have been among the items stolen by the tomb-robbers who
confessed to stealing from the mummy of Sobekemsaf II at their
trial in about 1109 BC (known from a papyrus in the Musée du
Cinquantenaire, Brussels and the Pierpont Morgan Library, New
York).
The heart scarab was
an
amulet
placed on the chest of the mummy to ensure that the heart, believed
to be the seat of intelligence and personality, was not removed. A
verse of Spell 30B of the
Book
of the Dead is roughly
incised around the base of the scarab. The appearance of
Sobekemsaf's scarab follows the instructions of the spell
exactly, being 'made from green stone, mounted in fine
gold'.
Spell 30B
was apparently very old, perhaps composed during the Old Kingdom
(about 2613-2160 BC). A heart scarab of the Thirteenth Dynasty
(about 1795-1650 BC) suggests that they were first produced in the
Middle Kingdom, around 400 years after the spell was supposedly
composed. It seems that a false pedigree was created for the spell,
so that it appeared older than it was. This illusion of antiquity
is also used to validify the 'Memphite theology' on
the Shabako stone.
I.E.S. Edwards, 'Sebekemsaf's "heart-scarab"' in Melanges Gamal Eddin Mokhtar I (Cairo, 1985), pp. 239-245
C.A.R. Andrews, Egyptian mummies (London, The British Museum Press, 1984)
I. Shaw and P. Nicholson (eds.), British Museum dictionary of A (London, The British Museum Press, 1995)
J. Capart, A.H. Gardiner and B. van de Walle, 'New light on the Ramesside tomb-robberies', Journal of Egyptian Archaeol-8, 22 (1936), pp. 169-93