Inner coffin of the priest
Hornedjitef
From the burial of Hornedjitef, Asasif, Thebes,
Egypt
Early Ptolemaic Period, 3rd century
BC
The mummy of Hornedjitef was encased in a
gilded
cartonnage
mask and cover, and two anthropoid (human-shaped) wooden coffins.
The coffins follow traditional Egyptian funerary practice in form
and decoration. This, the inner coffin, has a fine gilded face,
with curled and tapering beard and a richly decorated collar with
terminals in the form of falcon heads. In the centre of this collar
is depicted an image of the
ba,
and a pectoral (chest) ornament incorporating a scene in which
Hornedjitef adores four deities. Below the collar is an image of
the sun-god as a winged scarab beetle, flanked by baboons who
worship the rising sun disc. A funerary text is inscribed in
hieroglyphs
below. Either side of the text are figures of deities: the four
Sons of
Horus and the goddesses
Isis
and
Nephthys.
The
interior of the lid is decorated with many figures, mostly relating
to astronomy. Their position on the lid of the coffin is
particularly appropriate, as the lid was symbolically identified
with the heavens stretched above the deceased. The central,
full-face figure is that of the sky-goddess
Nut,
on whose body is written the text of chapter 89 of the
Book
of the Dead. To her left
is a list of planets and decans (stars that rose every ten days, by
which the passage of time could be reckoned during the night). To
the right of the goddess are the constellations of the northern
hemisphere.