What was osiris wrapped in




















Peters, and W. See also M. Wuttmann, L. Coulon, and F. Hill and D. Schorsch, exh. Marian Feldman. This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete.

Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. Identification and Creation Object Number Degryse Technical Observations: Much of the surface is covered with thick green corrosion products over cupritic red, with brown oxidized metal in smaller worn areas.

Sackler Museum, Gift of Charles C. Cunningham Accession Year Object Number To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request. A Seated Osiris Sculpture B Standing Osiris Sculpture Roeder associates the different poses to geographical areas within Egypt: those with hands side-by-side in Middle Egypt, those with hands one above the other in Lower Egypt, and those with the hands crossed over one another in Upper Egypt 1.

The position of the hands also appears to correlate with other broad stylistic features. For example, the ridge created by the shroud pulled around the shoulders occurs primarily on figurines in which the hands are arranged one above the other.

NOTES: 1. See also M. Wuttmann, L. Coulon, and F. Hill and D. Schorsch, exh. Marian Feldman. Susanne Ebbinghaus, ed. This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. Gallery Text As god of rebirth, Osiris is depicted in mummy wrappings. In the statuette shown here, we can identify Osiris by the objects that he holds and the way he is dressed. He holds a shepherd's crook and a whip, symbols of his authority.

He wears a crown with ostrich plumes and a false beard, items also worn by Egyptian pharaohs, as a reference to his role as a ruler. All ancient Egyptians hoped to be reborn into the afterlife and to be introduced to Osiris. In emulation of his myth the deceased were even likened to Osiris and referred to as the Osiris NN , and thus received the same protection as was afforded the god in death Taylor The methods of mummification and the rituals of burial in ancient Egypt had their origins in this archetype, and the accompanying essays in this virtual exhibition aim to explore Egyptian attitudes towards death further and illuminate the mysteries of resurrection.

Faulkner, R. The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts. Griffiths, J. The origins of Osiris and his cult. Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride, trans. Griffiths University of Wales Press Taylor, J.



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