Fragment thumbnail 1
Fragment thumbnail 2
Not on display

Fragment

c. 1550 BC - c. 1077 BC (made)
Place of origin

Serabit el-Khadim, in the Sinai peninsula, was an important turquoise mine worked throughout Egyptian history. The miners seem to have come largely from this region rather than the Nile valley; many graffiti were found at the site written in a language now termed ‘Proto-Sinaitic’. In his excavations of 1904-5, Flinders Petrie discovered huge numbers of votive items deposited at the temple of Hathor at the site, mostly dating to the New Kingdom. These were typically small items such as bracelets, plaques, sistra and figurines, usually made of blue-green glazed composition. This turquoise colour was ritually important to Hathor, who amongst many attributes was considered the protective deity of mining regions (one of her many names was ‘Lady of Turquoise’).

Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 6 parts.

  • Fragment
  • Fragment
  • Fragment
  • Fragment
  • Fragment
  • Fragment
Materials and techniques
Glazed composition, painted
Brief description
Six fragments of a situla, painted and glazed composition, Serabit el-Khadim, Egypt, New Kingdom
Physical description
Six body sherds from the lower part of a glazed composition situla. The cream ground is decorated with a motif of lotus leaves covering the majority of the body, outlined in black and glazed in differing tones of blue-green; the calyx of the flower would have been at the base of the situla. Above this is a yellow-green band.

Although unpreserved on the remaining sherds, the upper part of the body would likely have contained a figurative scene, based on parallel examples (see 717-1905).
Dimensions
  • Height: 8cm (Note: 716-1905)
  • Width: 5cm (Note: 716-1905)
  • Height: 5.5cm (Note: 716:A-1905)
  • Width: 6cm (Note: 716:A-1905)
  • Height: 5cm (Note: 716:B-1905)
  • Width: 5.5cm (Note: 716:B-1905)
  • Height: 6cm (Note: 716:C-1905)
  • Width: 4cm (Note: 716:C-1905)
  • Height: 6cm (Note: 716:D-1905)
  • Width: 5cm (Note: 716:D-1905)
  • Height: 4.8cm (Note: 716:E-1905)
  • Width: 2cm (Note: 716:E-1905)
Styles
Marks and inscriptions
Transliteration
.
Gallery label
Historic display label:

Six fragments from three bell-shaped cups
XVIIIth-XIXth Dynasties (about 1450-1200 B.C.)
716 to e-1905
Object history
Found at Serabit el-Khadim, 1904-5 excavation season.
Summary
Serabit el-Khadim, in the Sinai peninsula, was an important turquoise mine worked throughout Egyptian history. The miners seem to have come largely from this region rather than the Nile valley; many graffiti were found at the site written in a language now termed ‘Proto-Sinaitic’. In his excavations of 1904-5, Flinders Petrie discovered huge numbers of votive items deposited at the temple of Hathor at the site, mostly dating to the New Kingdom. These were typically small items such as bracelets, plaques, sistra and figurines, usually made of blue-green glazed composition. This turquoise colour was ritually important to Hathor, who amongst many attributes was considered the protective deity of mining regions (one of her many names was ‘Lady of Turquoise’).
Bibliographic references
  • Situlae of this type are discussed in W.M.F. Petrie, Researches in Sinai (New York: Dutton and Co., 1906): 152, Fig. 158
  • C. Lilyquist, "Ramesside Vessels from Sinai", in S. D'Auria, Servant of Mut: Studies in Honour of Richard A. Fazzini (Leiden: Brill, 2008): 155-165
Collection
Accession number
716-1905

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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