Egyptian Predynastic burnished pottery jar

E95

£530.00

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A predynastic burnished red pottery oviform vase with a pointed base and an everted open mouth.

 Culture 
Egypt, Predynastic, Naqada I period, c. 4000 – 3500 BC

 Size 
12.2 x 8.8 cms

 Condition 
Intact with light surface wear and a small chip under the rim

Provenance 
Ex. collection: Frederick William Robins FSA FRGS, Oxford, UK (deceased c. 1962); thence by family inheritance to present. Partial label on lower body inscribed P14.

FW Robins collected antiquities in the first half of the 20th Century and published several books including The Story of the Lamp (Oxford University Press, 1939) documenting the development of the oil lamp using over 800 items from his own collection.

Robins was very active in the academic and museum life of Oxford during the 1930’s, mixing with legendary archaeologists such as Sir Arthur Evans and Henry Balfour, and received acknowledgment from the Pitt-Rivers Museum in their annual report 1940-1941 for his voluntary work. The British Museum and the Pitt-Rivers Museum both hold antiquities from the FW Robins bequest, some of which were published by DM Bailey in 1963.

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Shabti figures

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Shabtis (also known as shawabtis or ushabtis) are small human figures, usually mummiform in shape, which were placed in tombs to replace and act as servants of the deceased in the afterlife - Read on.....
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