|
Date: |
|
Description: | Pear-shape, with open mouth. Harageh was excavated in the winter of 1913-1914 by R Engelbach and B Gunn, contemporaries of Petrie who was excavating the nearby site of Lahun at the time.
The cemeteries at Harageh have a range of dates. The earliest are predynastic (before 3100 BC) and then the place is used again as a cemetery from the late Old Kingdom c.2300 BC through to the New Kingdom ending in c.1069. Later during the Coptic phase it was used again.
The registry file includes correspondence from Petrie about a donation from the British School of Archaeology which included this object.
Accession number: NCM 1914-74 | Subjects: | food and drink? objects of indeterminate use (containers) ceramics EGYPTIAN | Temporal: | 2466BC-2200?BC | Source: | Nottingham City Museums and Galleries | Identifier: | http://media.culturegrid.org.uk/mediaLib... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
jar
Pear-shaped, with open mouth. Harageh…
-
jar
pear-shaped Harageh was excavated in…
-
jar
Pear-shaped, possible Badarian. Black-top ware…
-
beads
String of carnelian and faience…
-
beads
Turquoise faience beads with wider…
-
scarab
Inscribed: "Amen-Ra". Harageh was excavated…
-
jar
"PRE 407" written on exterior.…
-
jar
Globular. Harageh was excavated in…
-
-
beads
Green ceramic, earthenware, and garnet…
|