CHAPTER XII
THE LATE MIDDLE KINGDOM AND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD NECROPOLIS
BY HOWARD CARTER
Deep below the foundations of the ‘Valley’-Temple of Queen Hatshepsût in the Birâbi are rock-hewn tombs, or pit and corridor types, dating from the XIIth Dynasty on to the Intermediate Period.
This fact was first ascertained in 1910, and in that year twelve tombs of this necropolis were opened. Their exploration was continued in 1911, when four more were revealed, and three out of the four were thoroughly investigated.
All the graves examined during the two seasons had had their original burials previously pillaged: firstly, at a period not long after their origin, and certainly before the New Empire; and in certain instances a second time in the XVIIth or XVIIIth Dynasties, when some were re-used for odd burials.
These successive plunderings gave access to the white ants, the worst of all the enemies the explorer has to contend with. Often when a chamber is first entered its contents seem in comparatively good preservation, but on the slightest touch or movement they fall into a thousand fragments, their substance being riddled by these tiny insects.
The positions and plans of these tombs are shown in the Plan and Survey, Pl. XXX.
_Corridor Tomb 24._
This was the first and most spacious among those opened in 1910. It had no less than eight chambers, a long passage, an open court, and a pit. It was only from the remains of funereal débris, discovered in the rubbish of an open depression in the rock (i. e. the court), that it was recognized that an early and violated tomb was in the course of being revealed. These fragments were:--
1. The cross-bars of an _Angarib_ (bedstead made of plaited rope on a wooden frame supported by four legs).
2. The greater part of a wooden model boat of uncommon design.
3. A small piece of wood with beautiful cornelian inlay upon it from a coffin (?).
4. Broken pieces of cartonnage painted and gilded.
5. A part of the end of a square coffin, inscribed and giving the name [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘Ankhu’.
6. Another coffin board, inscribed with coloured hieroglyphs, reading--[Illustration: hieroglyph] giving the name ‘Khety’.
7. A broken arrow-head of flint with serrated edges.
8. Pieces of leather sandals, pottery, and a portion of the neck of a jar with [Illustration: hieroglyph] Men-hetep written upon it.
9. A scribe’s palette with two reed brushes (Pl. XLV. 3).
10. The hind half of an exquisitely made frog in glazed steatite, and the fore part of a lion in faience.[24]
When cleared enough to be entered the interior of the tomb presented a scene of utter despoliation. Its chambers were strewn with rubble mingled with bones, skulls, and tomb furniture, shattered and burnt, which only too well corroborated those traces of the ravages which had been found outside. In the central chamber was a burial--a wood dug-out coffin, anthropoid in form, the lid bound at head and shins with rope. Several days were spent in carefully searching the remains in this tomb, and by sifting the sand many times favourable results were obtained. These results are recorded below--
_Near the Entrance._ A small wooden statuette and pedestal; upon the latter are three barely visible lines of hieroglyphs, in which the name [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘Ankhu’ may possibly be traced, and if so it probably identifies the figure with the person mentioned on the coffin fragment found outside (Pl. XLIV. 1).
_Doorway._ A nude female figure in cedar wood, very much worn and originally coloured. She wears a heavy head-dress tied by a fillet on either side. Such figures were entered among the funerary complement for the personal use of the deceased (Pl. XLIV. 3).
_First part of Passage._ Two broken blue faience bowls. One shaped like a water-lily leaf and decorated with lotus floral designs (Pl. XLIV. 5), the other of biangular form, with its vertical sides encircled by a band of very indistinct hieroglyphs, which read [Illustration: hieroglyph] thus naming the ‘Lady of the house Ab-aau’ (Pl. XLIV. 4). Near these were three pieces of alabaster making up a complete bowl, a pendant of deep blue glazed faience, some blue glaze inlay, the fore-part of a hippopotamus, a bone and shell necklace, and lastly a leather ball.
_In South Chamber above the Pit._ Parts of a bifold wood jewel box (Pl. XLV, the lid was found in the passage), and the following beads and amulets that possibly came out of it:--
A. Blue glaze faience beads imitating shells. B. Haematite beads and scarab. C. Cornelian beads. D. Two amethyst scarabs. E. A hippopotamus head and crouching monkey in cornelian. F. Matrix of emerald _Ba_-bird. G. Necklace of amulets in matrix of emerald, amethyst, cornelian, blue paste, and glazed steatite and faience.
_North Chamber above the Pit._ A small jewel-box, turned upside down and containing the following ornaments (Pl. XLV. 1 and 2):--
A. Steatite scarab mounted on silver wire. B. Necklace of small round garnet beads. C. Garnet and cornelian bracelet. D. Greenstone cylinder mounted in gold. E. Broken agate cylinder mounted in gold. F. Two fragments of nuts of the _Balanites aegyptiaca_. G. Amulets--cornelian eye, emerald hippopotamus head, silver plaque, and gold bead. H. A tiny string of gold, silver, cornelian, and turquoise beads of the most minute and exquisite workmanship.
Nearly every basket of earth from the floor of this tomb contained numbers of deep violet lozenge-shaped ornaments made of glazed pottery. They are peculiar to the XIIth Dynasty, and seemingly were used for decorating the wrappings of the mummy, as is well illustrated by a mask cartonnage found in tomb No. 25, where they are depicted in rows and forming part of an ornamentation (Pl. XLIV. 2). In some cases actual mummy-cloth was found adhering to them, and all had some adhesive substance on their backs.
A complete series of pottery belonging to this tomb is given in Pl. XLVII, Figs. 1 and 2.
Fig. 1. A. Rough red pottery, coloured red, with white band. B. “ “ with white spots. C. “ “ coloured red with white stripes. D. “ “ rim and neck coloured red. E. Fine red pottery, plain. F. Grey pottery, with [Illustration: hieroglyph] written in red upon it. G. Pink pottery, plain. H. Grey pottery, ornamented with black, red, and yellow drop pattern. I. Very fine terra-cotta pottery, plain. J. Fine red pottery, coloured red or terra-cotta. K. Soft red pottery, plain. L and N. Fine red pottery, with rims coloured red. M. Fine red pottery, with white surface.
Fig. 2 illustrates two trays divided into compartments and two small vases, made of a very coarse red pottery.
Botanical specimens found in this tomb are figured in Pl. LXXIX. 2 under the letters A and H. The latter, a stone fruit, was found in great quantities, as well as frequently in the other tombs that were opened.
_Pit Tomb No. 25._
A pit tomb partially concealed by the paving-blocks of the terrace colonnade and foundations of the north boundary wall of the temple.
In the upper rubbish filling the pit were bricks from the doorway and broken pottery, giving evidence of former riflers; and, after a descent of some three metres or more, the openings of the sepulchral vaults at either side were exposed. These chambers, half-filled with earth that had poured in from the shaft, had in them remains of coffins, oblong in form, broken, and ant-eaten. They were of plain, thick wood, without decorations, and only the inner shell had, in some cases, bands of inscription. In the shaft itself, at the bottom, was a single coffin, dragged out from one of the chambers at the time of the early violation.
At first this grave seemed to be a great disappointment. But when, in Lord Carnarvon’s presence, the men found in the lower filling of the shaft an ivory pin and a piece of a box with silver binding[25], our hopes were raised. Lord Carnarvon at once stopped the workmen until a time when full surveillance of the clearing could be made. It was a difficult job, most careful work had to be done with trowel, bellows, and sometimes a spoon, extricating fragile objects while stones and sand poured down from the overhanging masonry above in a menacing manner at every gust of wind.
On the following day operations were begun by clearing the bottom steps of the shaft and searching the coffin. Under the latter, nine more ivory pins, fragments of alabaster, cosmetic vases, the broken parts of an ebony and cedar-wood toilet-box inlaid with ivory, and fragments of an ornamented ivory gaming-board were discovered, twisted and shattered into a hundred pieces. The coffin, too far gone for us to hope to preserve it (ants having eaten the whole of the wood, leaving only the bitumen coating perforated and like an eggshell), had had bands of yellow hieroglyphs along its sides and ends; but only here and there could a few signs be discerned. Still, enough could be made out to trace the title [Illustration: hieroglyph] and name [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘Great one of the southern tens, Rensenb’ (which was afterwards corroborated by the inscription on the mirror handle found on the mummy), and certain of the hieroglyphs were of the ‘mutilated’ type (i.e. [Illustration: hieroglyph] for [Illustration: hieroglyph], and [Illustration: hieroglyph] for [Illustration: hieroglyph]) often found in texts of the late XIIth Dynasty and Intermediate Period.[26]
The mummy, lying on its side, was reduced to a black powder through spontaneous combustion, caused by the damp that had filtered through from above. It had a cartonnage mask covering the head and shoulders, with gilt face, the head-dress painted yellow and striated with grey-green bands which had oval spots in black (illustrating the use of the violet ornaments found in tomb No. 24). Embedded in the wrappings, at the small of the back, was a blue faience hippopotamus (Pl. LI. 1). Round the neck a gold and obsidian necklace and a ‘_Shen_’ brooch of gold and cornelian (Pl. LI. 2). On the breast, concealed in the linen wrappings, was a bronze mirror with ebony handle mounted and inlaid with gold. The inscription upon it reads [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘Great one of the southern tens, Rensenb, repeating life’ (Pl. LI. 2). How it came about that these chambers should be ravaged, this burial dragged into the daylight of the open shaft, and yet unrifled, is a mystery yet to be solved.
_In the Southern Chamber._ At the entrance were the front part and pieces of the drawer of the toilet-box (Pl. XLVIII. 1), three alabaster vase lids, an alabaster vase, and a gold bead. Besides these articles this chamber had planks from wooden canopies and coffins, and the remains of three mummies (one a child) charred to soot. In the depression in the floor and lower chamber were found two broken ivory crocodiles, two splinters of a mystic wand, and the body of a stripped mummy; under the latter, in the dust, were beads of a necklace.
_In the North Chamber._ Among the many parts of coffins was one bearing inscriptions giving the usual prayers, &c., for a certain lady named [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘_Henut_’, born of [Illustration: hieroglyph] ‘_Sent_’. Here were also despoiled mummies, one of them having a wig of plaited hair (decayed), clasped by a gold fillet, and a necklace. Some stray beads and a mud sealing bearing a coil pattern were found when sifting the lower layer of dust covering the floor.
The following paragraphs give details of the objects found in this tomb that are not fully described above, including the pottery found scattered in its different chambers.
_Toilet-box_ (Pls. XLVIII-XLIX). An oblong box, made of cedar wood, veneered with ebony and ivory, and measuring 28·5 x 18 x 20 cms.
The front, two sides, end, and lid have in their centres large slabs of ivory, bordered by two narrow strips of ebony and ivory, with broad margins of ebony, the whole giving a unique appearance. The front is made to pull forward, and has attached to it a drawer half the depth and the whole length of the box (see Fig. 1, Pl. XLVIII). This drawer has its edges, top and bottom, veneered with thin strips of ivory, glued to its solid ebony sides and end, and in it a shelf, made of two pieces of wood, pierced with eight holes to receive vases for cosmetics and other toilet requisites.[27] The drawer slides in beneath a tray attached to the inner walls of the box. Access to the tray can only be obtained by raising the lid of the box; and it has, besides two small partitions in the corner, a hollow scooped out of the bottom to receive a mirror (see Fig. 2, Pl. XLVIII).[28]
The lid and front have silver knobs let into bindings of the same metal.
Engraved upon the front ivory slab is a delightful little scene (Pl. XLIX. 1) of the owner, [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘Kemen’, [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘true Royal friend’, [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘whom he (the king) loves’, [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘Chief over the secrets of the Royal mouth’, [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘the keeper of the department of the kitchen’, offering to his lord, the King Amenemhat IV. Around the margin of the top of the lid, gravered and inlaid with ivory powder is an inscription (Pl. XLIX. 2) bearing the prenomen and nomen of Amenemhat IV, with a religious formula to ‘Sebek’ [Illustration: hieroglyphs] Lord of Illahun (in the Fayûm) that he may give a good burial and long service to the ka of Kemen. The legend here gives also the name of Kemen’s mother [Illustration: hieroglyphs] ‘Ana’. The method adopted in the construction of the box is so peculiar that it is worth particular notice. Each front, side, end, and lid is made of six pieces of cedar wood, viz. a centre panel to receive the large slab of ivory, on either side two thin slips to receive the narrow strips of ebony and ivory, and lastly a top and bottom rail for the broad ebony margins. In fact, the cedar-wood body is made of as many pieces as there are horizontal overlaying leaves of the superior materials, all of which, with the exception of the front, where dowels are introduced, were merely stuck together by glue. The corners of the box are mitred, and the ends of the drawer dovetailed to the body of the front part of the box.
The four alabaster vases (Pl. LII. 1) belong to the drawer; there were three fragments of others.
_Ivory Gaming-board_[29] (Pl. L). Shaped like an axe blade and resting on four bull’s legs carved in solid ivory. The dimensions are 15 x 10 cms. (maximum measurement), total height 7 cms.
It contains a small drawer of ivory and ebony, which has a bolt of ivory shot in copper staples for fixing it when closed. Belonging to the game are ten carved ivory pins or playing pieces--five have dogs’ heads, and five jackals’ heads; these, no doubt, were kept in the drawer.
Its construction is a flat top made of two ivory slabs, backed by two wooden panels which are joined together by three transverse wood pegs passed through the thickness of each panel. The bottom was made of one piece of wood with cross-bars at either end. The curved ivory sides and end are backed with blocks of wood that take the same shape as the board, and leave in the interior an oblong space to allow entry of the drawer. The ivory bull’s legs are tongued into the wooden side-blocks, and are held there by means of three ebony rivets. Round the four edges, top and bottom, as well as the four corners, was an ebony veneer, most of which was destroyed. Glue was the means of adhesion. The wood used was sycomore. The upper surface (Pl. L. 1) has engraved upon it a palm-tree surmounted by the sign ‘Shen’ (see Fig. 14), the latter being pierced through the ivory and wooden body beneath. On each side of the palm-stem is a parallel line of ten holes, along the edges of the two sides a row of fifteen holes, and at the top edge on either side of the ‘Shen’ a row of four holes (and if including the corner hole, five). Each hole is encircled by a small ring, engraved, and is pierced through the ivory and wood below, and these holes were intended to receive the playing pieces. For some reason or other, a large hole was made in the centre of the palm-tree, but it was afterwards filled in. In the front edge of the board is a small semicircular notch, made to permit the thumb to grip the drawer when opening it.
Now a word as to the game itself; how was it played, and how were the moves denoted? Presuming the ‘Shen’ sign, which forms a large centre hole at the top, to be the goal, we find on either side twenty-nine holes, or including the goal, thirty aside. Among these holes, on either side, two are marked [Illustration: hieroglyphs] _nefer_, ‘good’; and four others are linked together by curved lines (see Fig. 14). Assuming that the holes marked ‘good’ incur a gain, it would appear that the others, connected by lines, incur a loss. Taking this for granted, and that the play terminates at the goal ‘Shen’, the game seems then to commence at the heart of the palm--the only place where five playing pieces aside could be placed without clashing with the obstacles (i. e. holes incurring gain or loss). Thus, starting from the first hole under the palm, and calling it No. 1, the tenth hole, by the indicating lines, shows a forfeit of two points, and the twentieth hole a forfeit of fourteen points. The good holes Nos. 15 and 25 have nothing to indicate what gain was attached to them. If it should be a profit of a certain number of holes, one would expect to find them marked like the forfeits, but possibly it was that they entitled (?) the player to the right of a second move, which could not be marked in such a manner. Now the moves themselves could easily have been denoted by the chance cast of knuckle-bones or dice,[30] both being known to the ancient Egyptians at an early period; and if so we have before us a simple, but exciting, game of chance, ‘Hounds contra Jackals’, and played somewhat as follows:--The opponents, taking each a side, place their five men in holes Nos. 1 to 5,[31] under the palm. The hounds having obtained the right of first throw, by a toss or some equivalent, start:--
HOUNDS.
_1st H._ Cast 3 = hole 8 “ 1 = “ 9 “ 5 = “ 14 “ 3 = “ 17
“ 6 = “ 23
“ 4 = “ 27
“ 3 = the goal = “ 30
_1 point to Hds._ (winning piece remains in goal).
JACKALS.
_1st J._ Cast 6 = hole 11 “ 5 = “ 16 “ 3 = “ 19 “ 6 = 25, wins 2nd throw = 4 = “ 29 “ 6 Returns to 25, wins 2nd throw 4 = 29 “ 6 Returns to 25, wins 2nd throw 1 = “ 26 “ 3 = “ 29
Jks. lose their piece.
* * * * *
HOUNDS.
_2nd H._ Cast 4 = hole 8 “ 6 = “ 14 “ 5 = “ 19 “ 1 = 20, forfeit 14 = “ 6 “ 4 = 10, forfeit 2 = “ 8 “ 5 = “ 13 “ 6 = “ 19 “ 3 = “ 22 Hds. lose their piece.
JACKALS. _2nd J._ Cast 3 = hole 7 “ 4 = “ 11 “ 5 = “ 16 “ 5 = “ 21 “ 6 = “ 27 “ 4 Returns to = “ 29 “ 4 Returns to = “ 27 “ 3 = the goal = “ 30 _1 point to Jks._ (winning piece remains in goal).
* * * * *
HOUNDS.
_3rd H._ Cast 6 = hole 9 “ 6 = 15, win 2nd throw 6 = “ 21 “ 6 = “ 27 “ 5 Returns to = “ 28 “ 4 Returns to = “ 28 Hds. lose their piece.
_3rd J._ Cast 5 = hole 8 “ 4 = “ 12 “ 6 = “ 18 “ 6 = “ 24 “ 6 = the goal = “ 30 _2 points to Jks._ (winning piece remains in goal).
* * * * *
HOUNDS.
_4th H._ Cast 3 = hole 5 “ 4 = “ 9 “ 4 = “ 13 “ 7 = 20, forfeits 14 = “ 6 “ 3 = “ 9 “ 5 = “ 14 “ 2 = “ 16 “ 4 = 20, forfeits 14 = “ 6 “ 6 = “ 12 “ 2 = “ 14 “ 5 = “ 19 Hds. lose their piece.
JACKALS.
_4th J._ Cast 2 = hole 4 “ 3 = “ 7 “ 3 = 10, forfeits 2 = “ 8 “ 4 = “ 12 “ 6 = “ 18 “ 3 = “ 21 “ 2 = “ 23 “ 5 = “ 28 “ 1 = “ 29 “ 5 Returns to = “ 26 “ 4 = the goal = “ 30 _3 points to Jks._ (winning piece remains in goal).
* * * * *
HOUNDS.
_5th H._ Cast 2 = hole 3 “ 4 = “ 7 “ 5 = “ 12 “ 2 = “ 14 “ 6 = 20, forfeits 14 = “ 6 “ 4 = 10, forfeits 2 = “ 8 “ 6 = “ 14 “ 1 = 15, wins 2nd throw = 6 = “ 21 “ 4 = 25, wins 2nd throw = 5 = the goal = “ 30 _2 points to Hds._
JACKALS.
_5th J._ Cast 5 = hole 6 “ 5 = “ 11 “ 4 = 15, wins 2nd throw 1 = “ 16 “ 6 = “ 22 “ 1 = “ 23 “ 4 = “ 27 “ 6 Returns to = “ 27 “ 2 = “ 29 “ 4 Returns to = “ 27 Jks. lose their man, but have 3 men in the goal, and thus win by 1 point.
_Necklace._ Of long drop-shaped beads made of gold and three kinds of coloured stones--cornelian, lapis lazuli, and matrix of emerald. They were strung in the ancient colour order, viz. red, blue, yellow, and green--cornelian for the red, lapis lazuli for the blue, gold for the yellow, and matrix of emerald for the green. Some of the beads had tiny floral tops, which, when combined, formed a lotus column, or perhaps a flower; but by no means did all of them have this additional piece, as was proved by some of the beads still attached by their original threads. Unfortunately this necklace, of exquisite quality, cannot be restrung, as all the wax cores of the gold beads (the gold being only a thin outer covering) has amalgamated, and the holes are completely choked. At present, in their tender state of preservation, to re-bore them would endanger their being split, as some already are.
_Amuletic necklace._ This second necklace is of quite a different type, very small, and of all kinds of beads and amulets. The order[32] seems to have been alternate groups of barrel garnet beads, divided by minute gold beads, and between them amulets in gold, cornelian, glazed steatite, and faience. There are also tiny cornelian and glaze beads among them. The amulets that occur are the eye, hand, rope-knot, crouching lions, crocodiles, flies, and other strange forms difficult to recognize. The position of these amulets, strung on the necklace, can only be a matter of conjecture.[33]
_Shell necklace._ Of this only a few pieces were found. They are small shells and ornamental vase-shaped beads, of lapis lazuli, matrix of emerald, and turquoise. Between each was a short cylindrical gold bead.[34]
_The obsidian and gold necklace._ (Pl. LI. 2) hardly requires description, the illustration showing all details. The beads are strung in the exact order in which they were found. The ‘Shen’ brooch (Pl. LI. 2) was not attached to it.
_Pottery._ The various types are all shown in Pl. LII. 2.
A. Soft red pottery. B. Fine red pottery. C. Rough red pottery. D. Rough red pottery with rim coloured red. E. Fine red pottery with rim coloured red. F. Red pottery. G. Red pottery, coloured red. H. Rough red pottery, spotted white. I. Red pottery, coloured red.
_Pit Tomb No. 27._
The contents of this tomb (Pl. XXX) were pillaged and almost entirely destroyed, the ants leaving not a fragment of the wood untouched. Among the débris of the original burials was an intrusive one of a child.[35] All that was of importance to record was: (1) A portion of an anthropoid coffin with _Rîshi_ decoration, like the case found in Tomb 32 (Pl. LIII. 3), but of much larger dimensions and with the face gilt; down the front of this coffin was a vertical inscription, of which the following was visible: [Illustration: hieroglyph] naming the ‘Scribe of the Army’, ‘Superintendent of the temple’, Nenen ...(?); (2) an ear from a silvered mask; (3) three pieces of the upper portion of a stela (the rest of this stela was found in Tomb No. 31, Pl. LIV); (4) a pot (the only one found in the tomb) like Fig. J in Tomb No. 24.
_Pit Tomb No. 28._
This grave (Pl. XXX) had even less in it than No. 27; in the shaft was an intrusive burial of a poorish type. The chambers, which were choked with rubbish, contained only a pair of copper forceps, a brown stone bead, and one hydroceramic vase (Pl. LIII. 1).
_Pit Tomb No. 29._
This tomb (Pl. XXX) gave access to two other similar graves on either side of it, Nos. 29 A and B. The three were plundered, and their chambers filled with sand almost to the ceiling. In the shaft of No. 29 was a burial with ‘dug-out coffin’ yielding a scarab, and in its chamber were two other burials, illustrated in Pl. LIII. 4. These were typical examples of the ‘dug-out coffin’. They contained ‘dried’ bodies wrapped in a simple winding-sheet (Intermediate Period?).
_No. 29 A._ This could not be thoroughly excavated, as the mouth of its shaft was under the southern part of the excavations which has not been cleared, and the sand poured down from above it as fast as it was removed from below, making it too dangerous to clear.
_No. 29 B._ was only accessible through a small hole in the south-west corner of pit No. 29; it gave equal trouble, and could only be excavated under considerable risk, its pit being partially under the foundations of the temple wall. It was full of plundered mummies huddled together under a great weight of sand and stones thrown in by the temple workmen when building the wall. With them was a wooden head-rest, a canopic jar lid, and a scribe’s palette, some roughly made chair legs, pieces of cartonnage (of linen covered with plaster, gilt), and a long flexible wooden implement, two metres in length, perhaps a weaver’s batten. The types of pottery found in these chambers are shown in Pl. LIII. 5:--
A. Rough red pottery, decorated with white paint, with holes in the neck for fastening the cover. B. Fine red pottery, coloured red. C. Red pottery, rim coloured red. D. Soft red pottery. E. Red pottery, has small spout, and upper part coloured red. F. Pink pottery. G. Red pottery, rim coloured red.
_Pit Tombs Nos. 31-34._
This group of tombs (Pl. XXX) is under the Lower Court of the ‘Valley’-Temple. The chambers are cut into one another, and thus form a homogeneous series. They were choked up with sand, with but little of their plundered contents left. It was hopeless to try to tell to which of the tombs the few remains belonged, and hence in enumerating them the chamber in which they were found can alone be given.
_Pit Tomb No. 31._ A ‘dug-out’ painted coffin burial with roughly painted shawabti box, and the lower portion of the stela found in Tomb No. 27 (Pl. LIV). In its chamber were found a few examples of pottery.
_Pit Tomb No. 32._ First chamber--an interesting type of a female figure made of painted wood with pottery head.[36] Second chamber--a _Rîshi_ coffin (Pl. LIII. 3) belonging(?) to the original burial. It was found lying on its right side in a space on the floor especially cleared for it, and was bound at head and foot with palm fibre cords, which makes it appear to have been re-used. Notwithstanding its appearance of perfect preservation when first discovered, the coffin and even the body inside were so completely rotten that they fell to pieces at the least touch; it was in such a condition that it was impossible to preserve it. It being the most complete mummy case hitherto found in these tombs, a lengthy description is necessary. The case, anthropoid in shape, was decorated as if enveloped by the wings of a bird. This _Rîshi_[37] decoration is on a light yellow ground, the feathers themselves being of deep bluish green, picked out here and there with red and white, and detailed in black. The face was flesh colour, with eyebrows and side-beard straps green, the eye sockets of copper with aragonite eyeballs and obsidian pupils. Down the centre of the front of the coffin was a vertical line of hieroglyphs reading: [Illustration: hieroglyph] [_blank space_]. Below the feet are the two kneeling figures of ‘Isis’ and ‘Nephthys’ facing one another, and between them a vertical legend reading: [Illustration: hieroglyph].
_Pit Tomb No. 33._ This had nothing in it, and being under the temple construction it was too dangerous to attempt a total clearance of its chamber or chambers.
_Pit Tomb No. 34._ This had only three intrusive interments, which were in an almost unrecognizable condition. Examples of the pottery vessels scattered about in the chambers of this group are given in Pl. LIII. 2. Their material does not differ from the other examples already described as coming from this necropolis.
The stela of Auy-res (Pl. LIV) found in Tombs No. 27 and 31 is of limestone, measuring 59 x 31 cms.; the inscriptions are incised upon the stone face and coloured dark blue; the figures are in the usual colouring and have blue collarettes. The horizontal legend begins with:--
‘(1) May the king give an offering to Osiris Khent-amenti, the Great God, Lord of Abydos, that he may give (2) oblations of water, incense, wax, all good and pure things (3) upon which the god lives ... for the ka of the Keeper of the Bow, Auy-res, justified.’
His family are recorded in the following order:--
Row 1. ‘His wife, Atef-s-senb. His son, the Great One of the Southern Tens, Y-meru. His son, the Great One of the Southern Tens, Erde-en-ptah. Row 2. His daughter, the servant of the Ruler, Auŷ-senb. His son the _Am-khet_,[1] Dedut-res. His sister, Auŷ-senb. His son, the _Am-khet_,[38] Y-meru. Row 3. The Keeper of the Bow, Sa-Hathor. The Lady, Sent-nw-pw. The _Uab_-priest of Amen, Sebek-hetep. The Lady, Sep-en-urdet.’
There was no evidence to show to which of these two tombs this stela belonged.
In the rubbish, and partially under the foundations of the wall of the Lower Court of the ‘Valley’-Temple, was a coffin[39] that had been thrown out from one of the XIIth Dynasty tombs. This coffin was of wood, rectangular and oblong in form, with no inscriptions or decoration; it contained a body of a female child. Round her neck was a cornelian necklace still attached by its strings, and on her breast was a bronze mirror reflector; from the manner this reflector was wrapped in linen it must have been buried with the deceased without a handle. The girl’s hair was plaited.
_Circular Pit No. 35._
This pit (Pl. XXX) was the last and most puzzling of all opened this season. It is a rock-hewn shaft, some three metres in diameter at the mouth and only 63 cms. at the bottom, and thus, like an inverted cone, descends 22·50 metres[40] into the _Tafle_ stratum. The filling was absolutely untouched, and from top to bottom consisted of pure black soil from the arable plain; the upper surface had been hardened by water. The bottom of the shaft, apparently unfinished, was on one side slightly deeper than the other. A hollow copper bead-like object of cylindrical-drop shape found on the top surface, was the only object discovered here. At four metres below the surface the shaft had been cut through one of the pit tombs[41] of the cemetery, and the hole in the side thus caused had been mended with mud bricks. Its whole meaning is at present inexplicable.[42]
_No. 36, Pl. XXX._
A large mud-brick structure of which only part of one side has been exposed by our excavations. This part lies within the area of the ‘Valley’-Temple (No. 14), and is in line with the Colonnaded Terrace. The one end (north-east corner) and the stretch of some thirty-five metres of wall that has been uncovered does not give us enough data to tell its exact meaning or date. It is built upon the bed-rock, and it averages four metres in height. The brickwork seems to be earlier than that of the New Kingdom. The probabilities are that it belongs to the Intermediate Period or even perhaps the Middle Kingdom. Towards the southern end of the part cleared by us the foundation of the wall has been built over the courtyard of Tomb No. 41.
_Tomb No. 37._
This tomb, shaped like an inverted T, is the largest one yet opened in this group; in fact it could be ranked among the larger mausolea of the Theban Necropolis, and evidently belonged to one of the higher Egyptian dignitaries (Pls. XXX, LV).
It consists of (1) a long corridor having an eastern frontage with some eighteen openings, which give access to a rock-cutting of the nature of an open court. (2) Cut in the back wall of this corridor, and at right angles to it, are a long central subterranean passage leading to a hall (_C_), and two sepulchral chambers. Access to one of these sepulchral chambers (_J_) is by means of a staircase, while the other (_E_) is approached by a vertical pit (_D_) of four metres in depth; both are cut in the floor of the hall (_C_). The northern end of the corridor was divided off by a stone and mortar partition, with a small chamber (_B_) at the back, which was presumably a portion divided off for a member of the owner’s family. The blind end of the corridor on the south had originally been closed by a mud-brick wall, and no doubt thus formed another private compartment like the third chamber (_A_), which is parallel to the central passage.
It appears, therefore, that there were five distinct burial chambers (and if counting the hall (_C_) a sixth) which were closed, leaving the greater part of the corridor and central passage open for any ceremonial rites that might be made by the living relations in favour of the deceased.
This great tomb, dating from the Late Middle Kingdom, was found to have been utilized for the storing of numerous stray burials of epochs ranging through the Intermediate Period down to the early part of the XVIIIth Dynasty. Our reasons for assigning this date to the tomb were the antiquities (Nos. 85, 86, 87) found in the layer of rubbish and burnt ashes that covered its floors; these were quite distinct from the coffins and other antiquities forming the cache which rested upon the rubbish.
It is difficult to imagine how such a large mausoleum, cut in the shallow and crumbling limestone stratum, with so many openings, could for long have been protected from plunderers. The smoke-blackened walls show how its contents were destroyed, and the martins’ nests, together with the innumerable mason-bee cells that adhered to the walls and ceiling, show that the tomb had been left open after having been plundered for a lengthy period, before it was re-used as a storehouse.
When revealed, the main entrance was not closed by bricks or by stones, as was often the custom, but the sand was merely poured over when the Ancients last covered it up. The remaining openings had certainly in some instances been closed by planks from old coffins, but the greater number were carelessly filled like the entrance. Three of the inner chambers were carefully closed; in two cases with bricks, and in one with stones. These closed chambers were as follows:--
_Hall (C)_ had its doorway bricked two-thirds up with crude mud-bricks and _Tafle_ mortar, and the remaining third of its opening with similar bricks but with a mud mortar (Pl. LVI), showing that it had been opened and re-closed a second time. The mortar-bed of mud for this last closing was found in the central passage (Pls. LV, LVI. 14) just as it was left by the ancient mason.
_Chamber (A)_ had its doorway completely closed with flat mud-bricks, and the outer surface smeared over with _Tafle_ stucco (Pl. LVII, above the coffin to the left), which was stamped in numerous places with a seal giving the _Nebti_ name [Illustration: hieroglyph] of Thothmes I (see Pl. LVIII. 1).
_Chamber (B)_ had its entrance blocked by a heap of stones piled before it and a coffin placed in front (Pl. LIX. 1).
Behind these bricked-up doorways was the greater mass of the burials that were stored in the tomb.
From whence all these burials came we have no evidence to show us at present, nor can we tell for certain the reason for their being concealed in this particular tomb. It is possible that, while clearing the ground for the great dromos of Dêr el Bahari, and during the preparation of its ‘Valley’-Temple, stray interments were disturbed, and that this tomb being so situated that it must necessarily be covered by the ‘Valley’-Temple, it was used by the pious officials of the Theban Necropolis as a place of concealment (see position of tomb in relation to the temple, Pl. XXX).
The seal impressions stamped upon the wall that closed chamber (_A_), we have just seen, give the _Nebti_ name of Thothmes I, and thus we have a date for the time when some of the coffins were re-interred, and probably the date when the above monument must have been begun.
The scattered manner in which the coffins were placed in the different chambers and passages of the tomb, and the fact that one of the chambers (_C_) had been re-opened and re-closed, tends to show that they were not placed in the tomb at one time, which is in favour of the theory that they really were disturbed interments stored there from time to time during the course of some work.
The latest date found among the objects of the whole cache was Thothmes III, and that name occurred only on one object--a small scarab (Pl. LXXII. 53 from burial No. 53, p. 80).
The two chambers in the corridor (_A_, _B_) contained eight and four separate coffins respectively; the hall (_C_) at the end of the passage had fourteen; in the pit (_D_), piled from bottom to top, were eighteen cases; and in the bottom crypt (_E_) was another batch of eight sarcophagi. Thus, counting also those lying about the open corridor and passage which numbered twelve, we obtain a total of sixty-four coffins. Besides these there were also twenty-eight other objects pertaining to funeral equipments.
Among these sixty-four miscellaneous wooden sarcophagi, some containing as many as four mummies in each, there were seven distinct types, and with them a great number of children’s coffins.
The types of the coffins of adults were: (1) Decorated rectangular, (2) plain rectangular, (3) ‘dug-out’, (4) _Rîshi_, (5) plain anthropoid, (6) semi-decorated anthropoid, and (7) decorated anthropoid of the New Kingdom. Each of these groups I have treated below, followed by a separate detailed description of each burial and object found in the tomb (see p. 70).
_Decorated rectangular coffins_, Nos. 7, 35, 59, 63 (for examples see Pl. LX. 1). The coffins of this class are most probably contemporaneous with the Hyksos period. They are similar to the coffin in the Cairo Museum belonging to a certain Abdu, a contemporary of the last of the Hyksos kings.[43] Coffin No. 59 (p. 81) contained four mummies, two of which, and a basket containing a scarab, gave conflicting evidence to the above dating. The scarabs found on these two mummies bear the names of Thothmes I and II (Pl. LXXII. 59 A, D), and the one in the basket (Pl. LXXII. 59) according to Newberry is of a similar date. But the remaining antiquities, i.e. head-rest, biangular bowl, and black vase of foreign character (Pl. LXVIII. 59) may be of an earlier period, and perhaps belonged to one of the other two mummies found in this coffin, and to the original interment. Coffin No. 63 (p. 82), which contained two mummies, had somewhat similar objects (Pl. LXVIII. 63) to No. 59, but on one of the mummies, a woman, there were two cowroids (Pl. LXXII. 63 A) which could be referred to the Early XVIIIth Dynasty. No. 7 (p. 70) yielded nothing beyond the actual body, and gives no further help for or against dating this group to these Dynasties.
_Plain rectangular coffins._ Of these coffins there are three kinds, those with gable tops, those with flat tops, and those with open-grid bottoms (for examples see Pl. LX. 2). The gable-topped coffins, Nos. 53, 62, 64, 65, 69, 71, 77, 83, with lids sometimes nearly semicircular in section, have always on the lid a longitudinal beam in the centre. These are probably of the same epoch as the other two kinds, but I am treating them here separately; they are very similar to some described by M. Lacau as _Sarcophages antérieurs au Nouvel Empire_ in his catalogue of that section of the Cairo Museum, more especially to No. 28030, which has exactly the same central beam and construction of lid. One is thus led to believe them to be of this period. Groups of objects found in some of them (for examples see Pl. LXIX. 64, 71, and 83) could be anterior to the New Kingdom. On the other hand, Nos. 53 and 62 (Pls. LXIX. 53 and LXXII. 62 A, B) contained antiquities of the Early XVIIIth Dynasty to as late as the time of Princess Neferu-ra (Hatshepsût’s daughter) and Thothmes III (see Pl. LXXII. 53). This last evidence is not absolutely contradictory, for we have examples of rectangular wooden coffins belonging to the New Kingdom. I am inclined, however, to assume that they have been re-used in these particular instances. No. 83 of the batch (p. 86) was covered intentionally with stone chippings and placed in a niche (Pl. LV. G) especially made for it. This gave us every reason to suppose it to be a burial made in the tomb when left open after destruction, and before it was used as a storehouse. The three pots (Pl. LXXIV. G) belonging to this coffin, and carefully placed behind it, give us a clue to the date of the stray pottery found mingled with the other coffins and lying on the floors of the passage and chambers of this great tomb, namely, the Intermediate Period.
_The flat-topped coffins_, Nos. 8, 15, 21, 22, 34, 36, 46, 48, 49, 55, 57, 75, 76, 78, 79, and 81 were often found to be made of scrap timber from other sarcophagi, and on the whole they perhaps incline to be later than the gable-topped coffins. The latest fixed date found on the objects in them was that of the Divine Wife, Hatshepsût, which occurred in that of No. 21, on a silver-mounted scarab ring (Pl. LXXII. 21). A head-rest found with it is certainly different in character to others found here, and it has engraved upon its stem the deities Bes and Taurt (Pl. LXVIII. 21). The head-rest found in coffin No. 57 (Pl. LXVIII. 57) has a short base, and it strikes one as being of a character between the earlier long-based types like No. 15 (Pl. LXVIII. 15) and that of No. 21. Burial No. 78 was furnished with the most complete group of objects (Pl. LXVIII. 78), and might be referred to the Early XVIIIth Dynasty. The last section of this group, the open-grid bottomed coffins, Nos. 50 and 52, are of smaller size (see Pl. LX. 52). They recall some of the older coffins of the Early Middle Kingdom found at Aswân that have false bottoms of lattice work.[44] But these coffins constructed out of wood from older sarcophagi are seemingly later than the rest, for in one of them, No. 50, a necklace of beads and amulets (Pl. LXXIII. 50) is certainly of the beginning of the XVIIIth Dynasty.
_‘Dug-out’ coffins._ Nos. 37 and 58 (see Pl. LXI. 58) are exceedingly rough, and cut out of tree trunks. One of them had its lid bound to its shell with rope. From a scarab (Pl. LXXII. 37) found in coffin 37 these ‘Dug-outs’ seem to belong to the beginning of the Second Theban Empire, though similar specimens found in some of the tombs recorded above were of a slightly earlier date.
_Rîshi coffins._ Nos. 2, 10, 11, 12, 60, 66, and 70 are a type peculiar to the Theban Necropolis, and only a limited number of these coffins have been discovered. They are named _Rîshi_[45] from the design painted upon them being composed of two large wings of many-coloured feathers that envelop the mummy form; for examples of those found here, see Pl. LXII. 1.[46] They belong to the Intermediate Period. With the seven specimens discovered in this cache there were only a few beads, a cowroid seal (Pl. LXXII. 11), a bronze mirror, and a wooden head-rest (Pl. LXX. 70); and, with the exception of the cowroid seal which might be as late as the Early XVIIIth Dynasty, these objects do not seem later than the end of the Intermediate Period.
The richest interment of this type, in personal objects, was the one found by Prof. Petrie,[47] and the antiquities here were all characteristic of the time between the Middle Kingdom and the New Empire.
If one compares the facial type of these coffins, more especially the profiles, of all the examples known, it will be noticed (as Erskine Nicol pointed out to me) that they have a distinct and uniform character. And it is not without interest to note that the expression and peculiarity of face strongly resembles the so-called Hyksos heads discovered by Prof. Naville at Bubastis.[48]
_Plain anthropoid coffins_, Nos. 5, 29, 38, and 47 (Pl. LXI. 29). Only one coffin of this series contained any material that was of use for dating. This coffin, No. 47 (p. 79), with the mummy of a woman, had a scarab of the Hyksos Period, a cowroid in glass, and a glazed scaraboid bead of the Second Theban Empire (see Pl. LXXII. 47). The two latter objects plainly show that the burial cannot be anterior to the Early XVIIIth Dynasty.
_Semi-decorated anthropoid coffins_, Nos. 6 and 68 (Pl. LXI. 6). These two specimens form a small group of their own. They are of very coarse workmanship, in design resembling those of the New Kingdom, but in the face they have a likeness to the _Rîshi_ type. They bear no names or inscriptions, and the only objects beside the mummies found in them were a few bead-bangles (Pl. LXXIII. 6), which give but little help towards their date. One is inclined to believe that they are coffins of the poorer people of the Early New Empire.
_Decorated anthropoid coffins of the New Kingdom_, Nos. 23, 24, 73, and 74 (Pls. LXII. 73, LXIII. 74). These coffins are painted white and embellished with a light and simple decoration. The finest specimen of the series was No. 23 (p. 74), but unfortunately it was found in very bad preservation, the rock ceiling of the tomb having fallen upon it. Coffin No. 24 (p. 74) contained, besides other antiquities, two scarabs of a much earlier period than the date of the coffin; one was of the XIIIth Dynasty and bears the name of a ‘Herald’ Ren-senb, the other is of the Intermediate Period and bears an enigmatical inscription (Pl. LXXII. 24). In coffin No. 73 (p. 84) was a small pot containing a kind of pomatum, which shows the use of such small pottery vessels so frequently found with burials of this cache. Coffin No. 74 (p. 85, Pl. LXIII) was of particular interest, it having depicted upon its sides, in place of the usual representations of the gods, scenes of burial ceremonies; and among the formulae written upon it occurs a variant form of the sign for Horus.[49]
A fifth coffin, No. 18 (Pl. LXII. 18), of simple blue decoration upon a white ground, might be placed in the same category, though perhaps it is of a slightly earlier date than the above four.
Two viscera boxes, Nos. 19 and 20, found at the feet of coffins 23 and 24, probably belong to them. One of the boxes, No. 20 (p. 73, Pl. LXI. 20), bore the name Ta-nezem, which occurred on coffin No. 24. At the feet of coffins 73 and 74 was another viscera box, No. 72.
_Children’s coffins._ These numerous small coffins were of exceedingly rough workmanship, without any decoration, and were of the following types: (1) Rectangular (Pl. LXI. 61, 80), (2) ‘dug-out’ rectangular (Pl. LXI. 41), (3) ‘dug-out’ anthropoid (No. 40), and (4) a type peculiar to itself (Pl. LXI. 42). No doubt their parents were among the many adult burials found in this cache, but we have nothing to tell us to which they belong. One of these small coffins, No. 84, had a small necklace (Pl. LXXIII. 84) like that found in 1910 in the Middle Empire tomb No. 24 (p. 53, Pl. XLV. H). Another, No. 31, contained (resting upon the shins of a mummy of a small child) a basket with the different kinds of necklaces represented in Pl. LXXIII under No. 31.[50] On one of these necklaces a bead, cowroid in shape, bore the prenomen of Thothmes I. These necklaces did not appear to belong to the child, as a number of stone chippings were found mingled with them, which would suggest their having been gathered up from the ground and thrown into the coffin.
The method used in wrapping the mummies was found in general to be similar in all cases. They had always one shroud of linen laid over them, and sometimes one underneath, with an occasional one between the actual bindings of the body. The limbs were separately bound. In some instances the mummy was tied up with long twisted linen ropes bound round, spirally, from head to foot, and these, I believe, had been re-wrapped. Some of the mummies were bitumenized.
In the _Rîshi_ burials the fashion adopted closely resembled the _Rîshi_ interment discovered by Professor Petrie (Petrie, _Qurneh_, pp. 7-9).
The scarabs found on the mummies, when worn as a ring, were always placed on the third finger of the left hand. A few beads sprinkled among the wrappings of the body was also found to be a not uncommon custom.
Among other objects pertaining to the funeral equipments found in this cache there were: No. 16, a rush-work basket containing articles of toilet use, and a scarab of Amenhetep I (Pls. LXIV, LXV. 16); No. 25, another similar basket containing what appears to be part of a scribe’s outfit (Pl. LXVI). Here a reed-case and palette illustrates the hieroglyph [Illustration: hieroglyph], but unfortunately the small bladder for colour, shown in the centre of the sign, is missing in this case. Nos. 28, 63 A, and 92, musical instruments (Pl. LXXI); No. 28, a bird trap (Pl. LXIV); Nos. 26, 28, two writing tablets; and Nos. 88, 89, and 90, three panel stelae (Pls. LXXV to LXXVIII).
_Catalogue of the Antiquities found in Tomb No. 37._[51]
_Entrance._
1. A bunch of vine leaves and twigs lying upon the débris of the tomb.
_North Wing._
2. _Rîshi coffin._ Shell, cut out of a stem of a tree, and left quite plain and rough. Lid, painted detail and feathering like No. 66, but in this case painted upon a yellow ground only. It bears no inscriptions, and the face is coloured yellow (Pls. LVII, LXII. 2).
Contents:--A well-preserved mummy of a tall man.
3. A very decayed mummy of a man, wrapped in a mat and bound with cord.
4. A group of broken pots and some vine leaves.
5. _Plain anthropoid coffin._ Like No. 29, but has its face painted yellow.
Contents:--A mummy of an old woman very loosely wrapped.
6. _Semi-decorated anthropoid coffin._ Lid and shell painted white with longitudinal and transverse bands in yellow. Face yellow. Head-dress yellow with blue lines. It bears no inscriptions (Pls. LIX, LXI. 6).
Contents:--Three mummies covered with a shroud. Two were lying side by side, the third was reversed with its head towards the feet of the others. (_a_) The reversed burial, mummy of a woman re-wrapped; (_b_) mummy of a woman; (_c_) mummy of a man with bead-bangles on left wrist, the beads were of dark violet glaze (Pl. LXXIII. 6).
7. _Decorated rectangular coffin._ The general ground colour is yellow, and the design painted upon it is in red, green, dark blue, and white. On the ends, the figures of _Isis_ and _Nephthys_ kneeling upon _neb_ signs are depicted upon a white ground. The lid was tied on with ropes of Dôm palm-fibre (Pl. LX. 7).
Contents:--Mummy of an old man, reduced to a mere skeleton. Among the débris from the abdomen of the mummy was a bladder-stone.
8. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Mummy of a man covered with a sheet. Resting against the coffin was an earthenware pot (Pl. LXXIV. 8).
_Central passage._
9. The base of a wooden head-rest (this was similar to those found in the coffins of this cache).
10. _Rîshi coffin._ Broken and in bad condition. It was made and decorated like No. 2.
Contents:--Mummy of a man very roughly wrapped.
11. _Rîshi coffin._ Shell, plain wood. Lid, the ground colour white and yellow, and the detail like No. 66. The longitudinal band for text down the front had no inscription (Pls. LVI, LXII. 11).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman lying flat on its back with the head turned towards the left. A small child’s mummy was resting on her feet. Among the débris at the bottom of the coffin were: (1) a few small beads of greenish blue faience; (2) a cowroid seal of green glazed steatite (Pl. LXXII. 11); in the hole pierced through the cowroid seal were remains of thread.
12. _Rîshi coffin._ Like No. 66 (Pl. LVI. 12).
Contents:--A scantily wrapped mummy of a man.
13. _The frame of a wooden stool._ This was leaning against the wall, and it rested upon the mutilated remains of a mummy (Pl. LVI. 13). With the débris of the mummy was (1) the greater portion of a large necklace of blue faience beads: the remainder of this necklace was found scattered upon the floor as far as the entrance of the hall at the end of the central passage (Pl. LXXIII. 13); (2) the mouth and nose of a mummy mask.
14. _A mortar-bed._ The mud mortar here (Pl. LVI. 14) appears to have been mixed for the second closing of the doorway of the hall (_C_); the first closing of this doorway was with a _Tafle_ mortar.
15. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Like No. 75, the coffin shows signs of rough handling, and had been broken to pieces.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman. By the left shoulder was a wooden head-rest broken into two pieces and the central portion of its stem missing (Pl. LXVIII. 15); on the third finger of the left hand was a blue glazed steatite scarab tied with string (Pl. LXXII. 15); and sprinkled in the linen wrappings were a few small beads of blue faience.
_Hall (C)._
16. _An oval-shaped rush basket._ This basket is finely woven and measures 50 cms. across its long axis. It shows traces of coloured strands interwoven into the mesh at intervals to form triangular markings, but the colour of these markings has deteriorated. The lid has a flange round its lower edge to fit into a corresponding rim or flange on the inner side of the mouth of the basket itself (Pl. LXIV. 16).
Contents:--A pair of bronze forceps for extracting hair (Pl. LXV); note the curved ends made expressly for that purpose.
A razor very finely wrought of copper, with two separate cutting edges. One edge or blade is slightly concave for shaving the convex surfaces of the head, face, and body; the other blade is of convex shape for shaving the concave parts, such as the arm-pits (Pl. LXV). The preservation is so good that the knife edges are still keen, and the prints of the ancient finger-marks are still visible upon its polished surfaces. It measures 18·5 cms. in length.
A hone of granular white stone for sharpening the razor (Pl. LXV).
A kohl-box made of cedar-wood (?). It is octagonal in shape, and has an ivory lid and base. The lid turns on a stud-headed wooden peg, and when closed it was held in place by an ivory bolt shot into copper staples. On the side of the box, slung in two copper staples, is the ebony kohl-stick. The total length is 7·9 cms. (Pl. LXV).
The handle and clasp of a fan made of wood (Pl. LXV).
A pottery bowl (Pl. LXV).
An ebony kohl-stick.
A pair of leather sandals (these were adhering to the bottom of the basket, and could not be removed).
A large round basket (Pl. LXIV, right-hand side of illustration).
A small round basket (Pl. LXIV, left-hand side of illustration).
The large round basket contained:
A kohl-pot of hard grey stone like aragonite, and a kohl-stick of ebony (Pl. LXV).
A bronze mirror made of copper, measuring in its maximum length 17 cms. (Pl. LXV): the handle had been coated with a white metal (silver?) to prevent corrosion.
A scarab made of green jasper and bearing the prenomen and nomen of Amenhetep I (Pls. LXV, LXXII. 16). It is round-backed and a fine specimen.
Some decayed locks of hair.
The smaller round basket contained:
A blue glazed steatite scarab of the Hyksos Period (Pls. LXV, LXXII. 16).
17. _A chair and a stool._ These were broken and tucked between the foot of coffin No. 18 and the wall (Pl. LXXI). The chair made of wood has a low square seat of rush-work mesh plaited upon a frame and supported by four square legs; the legs are strengthened by cross-bars. The slanting, curved, compound back is dowelled into the frame of the seat, and it is stayed by uprights which are continuous from the back legs; it also had (now missing) a central strut at the back. These uprights and the central strut were fixed to the back of the chair by means of ivory pegs. The principal constructive joints of the main body of the chair are strengthened by angle-pieces of carved bent wood, and these angle-pieces when exposed to view are ornamented by being composed of several kinds of wood. The top rail of the back (missing) appears from some of the remaining ivory pegs to have been made of ivory. It measures 41 × 52 cms. square, the seat 28 cms. high, and the top rail of the back must have been something like 75 cms. when perfect. The stool had a similar seat to the chair, and it also has similar strengthening bars between the legs. It stands 16 cms. in height, and measures 38 × 35 cms. square.
18. _Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Kingdom._ Ground colour white; head-dress and bands for hieroglyphs blue. The inscriptions, written in black, with linear hieroglyphs of the Intermediate Period style, do not give any name (Pl. LXII. 18).
Contents:--Mummy roughly wrapped. The sex was difficult to ascertain.
19. _Viscera box._ Small square box painted white and of inferior quality. The interior, divided into two compartments by a central partition, contained matter wrapped in linen like the viscera of a mummy.
20. _Viscera box._ Painted white, with the _de hetep seten_ formula upon the lid giving the name [Illustration: hieroglyph] Ta-nezem. Depicted upon the four sides of the box are human-headed canopic jars, with, written on either side, the usual formulae in vertical bands (Pl. LXI. 20). The interior, divided into four compartments, contained similar matter to No. 19 (see coffin No. 24).
21. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Like No. 75 (broken).
Contents:--Mummy of a man covered with a sheet. At the side of the left shoulder a wooden head-rest (Pl. LXVIII. 21), with, engraved upon its stem, the deities _Bes_ and _Taurt_. On the third finger of the left hand a scarab mounted on a silver ring (Pl. LXXII. 21). The scarab is round-backed, of green glazed steatite, and has inscribed upon its base the ‘Divine Wife, Hatshepsût’.
22. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Like No. 75 (broken).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman, decayed and fallen to pieces. In the débris traces of plaited hair and two red jasper scarabs (Pl. LXXII. 22).
23. _Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Empire._ Ground colour white. Head-dress, blue striated with yellow lines. Face, yellow, with the eye-sockets of bronze, eyeballs of aragonite, and pupils of obsidian. Decoration, round the neck a collarette painted to represent rows of coloured beads, fringed with drop pendants, and with hawk-headed clasps. Below, over the breast, the vulture _Nekhebyt_ and goddess _Nut_. On either side, at the ankles, the jackal _Anubis_ is represented resting on his pylon. At the feet _Isis_ and at the head _Nephthys_. There are three transverse bands round the body and one longitudinal band down the front, all of which contain the usual religious formulae with the owner’s name [Illustration: hieroglyph] Tahuti. On the sides of the shell, in the panels formed by the bands of hieroglyphs, are representations of the different gods facing legends dedicated to them. The lid was fixed to its shell by stud-headed wooden pegs.
Contents:--Mummy of a man with his hands crossed over the thighs. On the third finger of the left hand, attached by string, was a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 23).
Beneath the coffin, and lying on the floor of the chamber, was a walking staff 142 cms. in length. The bark upon the stick was intact and it resembles that of cherry wood. The end was worn, and at the handle a natural projecting branch was trimmed so as to form a crutch.
24. _Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Empire._ This coffin was similar to No. 23, but not so fine. The eyes were only painted, and the decoration varied by having the goddess _Nut_ alone below the collar, the absence of the two jackals on the sides of the ankles, and _Nephthys_ on the head. The legends, between the bands of formulae, referring to the gods had been added in black ink after the completion of the coffin. It bore the name [Illustration: hieroglyph] Aah-hetep, who was called [Illustration: hieroglyph] Ta-nezem (see viscera box No. 20).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman carefully wrapped, with the right arm across the breast, and the left arm resting at the side. She was covered with a sheet which when removed exposed two statuettes lying on either side of the knees of the mummy (Pl. LXVII. 2), and upon the shins a round shallow basket (Pl. LXIV. 24) containing a heart scarab made of unburnt steatite bearing an enigmatical inscription (Pl. LXXII. 24). On the left hand, tied with string to the third finger, were two scarabs: one, high-backed and of blue glazed steatite, bore the name of the ‘Herald Ren-senb’; the other, high-backed and of blue paste, had a winged _kheper_ surmounted by _Ra_ engraved upon its base (Pl. LXXII. 24). Underneath the mummy was a very small basket containing three copper forceps and a kohl-stick.
The statuette found on the right side may be described as follows: Small portrait figure of a boy named [Illustration: hieroglyph] Amenemheb, nude, and of electrum; dedicated by his father Tahuti[52] ‘who makes to live his name’. It measures 13 cms. high, and stands upon a wooden pedestal which is inscribed. The work is that of a very good artist, showing great instinctive feeling and subtle modelling as well as delicacy. Though the actual finish of the detail is not carried to a very high pitch, this fact does not lessen its beauty, and a glance at the photographs (Pl. LXVII. 1 and frontispiece) will at once show its charm and high art sense. In the left hand is a lotus-bud with long and flowing stalk. The metal was cast and the figure worked upon after it was chilled. The statuette at first may seem attenuated, but any one who knows the youth of modern Egypt will at once recognize its truth.
The statuette found on the left side was in wood, of a boy named [Illustration: hieroglyph] Hu-uben-ef, and it was dedicated by his father Tahuti ‘who makes to live his name’. This figure stands 31 cms. in height, and is very cleanly cut, the work good, but of a different and perhaps not so high a standard as the metal figure of his brother. Nevertheless it is exquisitely rendered and shows a strong likeness to the other, particularly in the shape of the head. The pedestal is inscribed with the dedication, and mentions also a prayer for _per-kheru_ offerings for the _ka_. Traces of colour, red, are visible on the nude parts; the hair is coloured black, the eye-balls are painted white, the pupils, eye-lashes, and brows black (Pl. LXVII. 2).
25. _An oval-shaped basket._ This basket is similar in make to No. 16 and measures 40 cms. across its long axis. It is of coarser weaving and shows no signs of decorations (Pl. LXIV. 25). Some bituminous material had been spilt into it, and many of the objects it contained adhered to its inner side and were stuck together from that cause.
Contents (Pl. LXVI):--It seemed to have contained a scribe’s outfit, which was once probably complete, but many of the objects found in it were broken and parts of them were missing. These were: (1) a large reed case made of a section cut from the stalk of a thick rush. At the top this has a floral ornament made of four pieces of carved wood which are let into spaces cut in the sides at the end and bound in position by a strip of linen. The node or natural joint of the rush has been utilized for the bottom end, and the top end was stopped by a rag plug. In it were found twenty-six thin reeds and a few seeds of a plant.[1] (2) A small reed case made like the former one described above, but without top ornament. It enclosed fifteen thin reeds and similar seeds of a plant.[53] (3) A wooden palette varying only from the common and well-known types by having three small oblong-shaped holes pierced diagonally through the side corners for strips of leather (?) for suspension. (4) A peculiar wooden instrument, mallet-like in shape: its use is unknown to me. There are on the small end indentations like marks that could be caused by tightly-bound string. (5) A rectangular oblong piece of hard wood. Its use is unknown to me; but it appears to be part of some instrument, as there are two holes in one side and another at the end. In all three holes there are ends of broken pegs. (6) A stick some 30 cms. in length. It seems to be the cross-bar of a pair of scales (note the hole and peg in the centre and peculiar notched ends). (7) A bag made of woven fibrous string. (8) A small linen bag; the mouth was drawn together by string in the same manner as purses of the present day. (9) A roll of leather, bound with strips of the same material. (10) A roll of linen (not shown in the Plate). (11) Very small fragments of papyrus which seem to have been torn from a small roll of papyrus (not shown in the Plate). (12) A clay figure of a cynocephalous ape (Thoth). This little creature was wrapped in linen. (13) Human-headed sphinx, cut out of a sheet of copper. (14) A large round piece of wax. (15) A tortoise-shell. (16) A miniature clay cup. A strip of linen was bound round the stem. (17) Model knuckle-bone in clay. (18) Some pieces of resinous material. (19) A small wooden peg. (20) A small amuletic figure in green glaze faience. (21) One large clay disk, four wax disks, and twelve disks of different sizes made of some black material. They appear to be weights:
1. Clay 12·0 grains. 2. Wax 4·0 “ 3. “ 4·0 “ 4. “ -- }weight obscured from bitumen 5. “ -- } adhering to them. 6. Black material 3·5 grains. 7. “ “ 3·5 “ 8. “ “ 3·5 “ 9. “ “ 3·0 “ 10. “ “ -- broken. 11. “ “ 3·0 grains. 12. Black material 2·5 grains. 13. “ “ 2·5 “ 14. “ “ 2·5 “ 15. “ “ 2·5 “ 16. “ “ 2·5 “ 17. “ “ 2·0 “
26. _A writing tablet._ This tablet, made of wood and covered with stucco, with surface polished for writing, bore inscriptions on both sides. It was broken in two halves, measures 48 × 26·5 cms., and was found among the stones covering the floor of the chamber (see Chapter XIII by Dr. Möller).
27. _Parts of a model five-stringed musical instrument._ Similar to Nos. 28, 63 A, and 92 (see Pl. LXXI, and for description No. 63 A).
28. _A pottery pan containing various objects._ (1) A model four-stringed musical instrument (Pl. LXXI. 28) made of sycomore wood, ebony, and ivory. (For further description see No. 63 A.) (2) A bird-trap (Pl. LXIV. 28) made of wood and of the following construction and mechanism:--Two flat boards cut semicircular and joined in the middle by a central broad bar of wood which is slightly longer than the diameter of the circle formed by the two semicircular boards; these three pieces of wood formed the floor of the trap. Upon the central bar, it will be noticed that there are two pairs of pillars, grooved on top, and a hole in the bar on the right and left side of each pair of pillars (see Pl. LXIV). Strung over each pair of pillars were (now missing) several strands of catgut (?), with their ends passed through the holes on either side, and held at the back by short pieces of stick. By revolving these pieces of stick at the back the strands of catgut were twisted and brought to any degree of tension required, and thus by this method formed two spring-hinges. Fixed in these spring-hinges was a flexible piece of stick bent to form an arched bow (not shown in Pl. LXIV), either end of the bow being passed through the strands of twisted gut at such an angle as to cause the bow to be pressed on to one half of the circular bottom of the trap (the position when closed). Attached to the bow and on the opposite half of the bottom of the trap was a net (see holes for this purpose and remains of net, Pl. LXIV. 28), sufficiently large to allow the capture of a bird. To open the trap, the bow would be pulled over to the side that the net is attached to. On this side, at the edge, there is a notch (see Pl. LXIV. 28) for a pillar-catch which held the bow open. This catch was worked by a string through a hole beside it (see Pl. LXIV. 28), which was passed underneath and brought up through a hole in the centre of the bottom of the trap (see Pl. LXIV. 28), where the string was attached to a sensitive adjustment so placed that the movements of a bird touching it would detach it and cause the trap to close (i. e. the bow to spring into its original position on the opposite side). The wooden bow belonging to the trap was found sometime afterwards among a lot of stray wood that came from the tomb, and it was exactly as described above. (3) A mechanical toy bird made of wood (Pl. LXIV, right and left of trap). (4) Pottery bowl of red pottery full of a brown powdery substance. (5) A painted clay head of a bull. (6) A small round basket containing a blue faience kohl-pot. (7) A writing tablet like No. 26 (see Chapter XIII by Dr. Möller).
29. _Plain anthropoid coffin._ The outer surface of this coffin is painted white, with the features of the face roughly delineated in black (Pl. LXI. 29).
Contents:--Mummy of a girl.
30. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80.
Contents:--Skeleton of a baby.
31. _Dug-out rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 41.
Contents:--Mummy of a child. In the wrappings covering the hair were some bone and cornelian beads like those found in coffin No. 78 given in Pl. LXXII. 78. Resting on the feet of the mummy was a basket turned over and its contents spilt. The contents were several necklaces of many kinds of blue faience beads, of which examples are given in Pl. LXXIII. 31. With them was a small blue faience kohl-pot of usual type. One of the cowroid beads bore the prenomen of Thothmes I, while others had hieroglyphic signs on them, including one which had [Illustration: hieroglyph] upon its base.
32. _A bunch of papyrus reeds._
33. _A small obsidian unguent vase._ This was found resting upon the chest of coffin No. 23.
34. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75 (broken).
Contents:--Mummy broken to fragments.
35. _Decorated rectangular coffin._ Smashed to pieces by the falling of the rock ceiling of the chamber. There were no traces of objects.
36. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Among the decayed remains of a mummy was a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab, bearing a very fine example of spiral pattern engraved upon its bezel (Pl. LXXII. 36).
37. _Rectangular dug-out coffin._ Similar to No. 58 (lid missing).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman. In the débris of the mummy, on the bottom of the coffin, was a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 37).
38. _Plain anthropoid coffin._ Similar to No. 29.
Contents:--Mummy of a man. Lying on the bottom of the coffin was a blue faience scaraboid bead (Pl. LXXII. 38).
39. _Parts of a frame of a wooden stool._ Similar to No. 13.
40. _Anthropoid dug-out child’s coffin._ Painted white and very roughly made.
Contents:--Child’s skeleton.
_Pit (D)._
41. _Rectangular dug-out child’s coffin._ The shell was cut out of one block of wood, and for the lid a flat board was used. Wooden pegs at either end of the lid show that it once had head and foot pieces (P. LXI. 41).
Contents:--Mummy of a child.
42. _Rectangular dug-out child’s coffin._ This was of peculiar type. The block of wood from which it was made was cut in half diagonally, so that the lid and shell were of equal proportions. Some auxiliary pieces of wood had been let into the lid to strengthen it (Pl. LXI. 42).
Contents:--Skeleton of a baby.
43. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80.
Contents:--Skeleton of a very young child. In the shell of the coffin there were a few miniature blue faience beads.
44. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80. The lid was tied on with rope.
Contents:--Skeleton of a child.
45. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80.
Contents:--Mummy of a child.
46. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Mummy of a man.
47. _Plain anthropoid coffin._ Similar to No. 29. The lid was tied on with rope.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman, in bad condition and much decayed. In the débris there were some bone bead-bangles (for example see Pl. LXXIII. 53); a blue glazed steatite scarab of the Hyksos period; a turquoise blue glass cowroid bead; and a blue faience scaraboid bead (Pl. LXXII. 47).
48. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Mummy of a man.
49. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Two mummies; one of a man, the other of a woman, lying head to feet. Among these remains were some bone and cornelian bead-bangles (for example see Pl. LXXIII. 78).
50. _Rectangular open-grid bottomed coffin._ Similar to No. 52.
Contents:--Mummy of a half-grown child. The mummy was enveloped in reeds. Upon it were bone and cornelian bead-bangles (see Pl. LXXIII. 78); a group of tubular barrel-shaped beads, coated with chips of glass and disk-shaped faience beads; also an amuletic necklace (Pl. LXXIII. 50). The beads of this amuletic necklace were made of cornelian, faience, and blue opaque glass; the amulets were flies, hawks, and symbolical knots, made of glazed and unglazed steatite, jasper, and faience, and the central pendant of gold. The original position of these objects upon the mummy it was impossible to ascertain.
51. _Rectangular dug-out child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 41.
Contents:--Mummy of a child. In the coffin, underneath the mummy, was a wooden throw-stick and a gold earring; the second gold earring was afterwards found at the bottom of the pit. The throw-stick, 42 cms. in length, is finely carved out of very hard wood, and it has a propeller-like twist.
52. _Rectangular open-grid bottomed coffin._ A plain wood rectangular coffin, with wooden bars at intervals in place of the boarded bottom (Pl. LX. 52).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman, bent, as it was too large for the coffin. On the third finger of the left hand, attached by string, were two jasper scarabs (Pl. LXXII. 52). One of the scarabs had a fish and lotus-flower engraved upon its bezel.
53. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62, but has no traces of paint.
Contents:--Mummy of a man. Beside the head, and resting on the bottom of the coffin, were:--(1) a small wood and ivory jewel-box (fallen to pieces); (2) an alabaster bowl in the shape of a cartouche; (3) a blue faience bowl; and (4) a pottery vase (Pl. LXIX. 53). The mummy had rotted away, and among the débris were:--(1) round-backed blue glazed steatite scarab, mounted in a gold funda, bearing on its base the name of the royal daughter, Neferu-ra (daughter of Queen Hatshepsût); (2) round-backed blue glazed scarab bearing the prenomen of Thothmes III; (3) round-backed green glazed scarab, mounted in gold funda, bearing a decorative pattern; (4) cowroid seal of glazed steatite (worn to brown) bearing a decorative pattern, and mounted in a gold funda; (5) high-backed scarab of dark green paste bearing a floral pattern, and mounted upon a copper-wire ring--the wire is threaded through the scarab and is passed through a small hole on the other end of the wire, flattened and pierced for the purpose, and it is held thus by being twisted round the wire a few times (Pl. LXXII. 53). Fallen out of the small jewel-box (mentioned above) there were three necklaces. One of them was a long string of violet faience beads (similar to No. 6, Pl. LXXIII); another was made up of plain bone beads (Pl. LXXIII. 53); and the third consisted of cornelian, violet faience, and gold beads, with amulets at intervals made of gold, silver, cornelian, and blue glass (Pl. LXXIII. 53).
54. _A grey pottery vase_ (Pl. LXXIV. D), bearing a hieratic inscription (see Chapter XIII, by Dr. Möller).
55. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Two adult and one child’s mummy. Like the coffin they were very much broken. Among the remains were bone and cornelian beads, and an ivory bracelet (Pl. LXXIII. 55, on the plate incorrectly 85).
56. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80.
Contents:--Mummy of an infant.
57. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Three adult mummies, which, like the coffin, were broken. With them was a wooden head-rest (Pl. LXVIII. 57); a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 57); and a few stray beads of cornelian, faience, and bone.
58. _Rectangular dug-out coffin._ The lid was tied on with rope (Pl. LXI. 58).
Contents:--Mummy of a man.
59. _Decorated rectangular coffin._ The colouring is similar to that of No. 7, except that instead of the two goddesses at either end there are geometrical drawings (Pl. LX. 59).
Contents:--Four mummies covered with a large shroud. At the head end of the coffin, and resting on the mummies, there were: (1) a black pottery vase; (2) a red pottery biangular bowl; (3) a wooden head-rest; (4) a basket containing four dôm nuts, and a vase which had in it a piece of crystal, and a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXVIII. 59 and Pl. LXXII. 59).
The four mummies, packed head to feet, were as follows:--
(_a_) Mummy of a woman with a scarab necklace (Pl. LXXII. 59 A); a bead necklace (Pl. LXXIII. 59); and some bead-bangles of bone and cornelian (for examples see No. 78, Pl. LXXIII). One of the scarabs upon the necklace bears the nomen of Thothmes I.
(_b_) Mummy of a child.
(_c_) Mummy of a man wrapped in very coarse linen.
(_d_) Mummy of an adult (sex difficult to ascertain).
With the mummy there was a walking-staff; in the abdomen were some dôm nuts, and a group of scarabs (Pl. LXXII. 59 D), which appear, from the string that some were still threaded upon, to have once formed a necklace. In the wrappings near the neck of the mummy were some faience and bone beads. One of the scarabs bore upon its bezel [Illustration: hieroglyph] Neb-ded-Ra, encircled by a coil pattern (cp. Scarab, B.M., No. 37730); another had the prenomen of Thothmes II, above a crouching jackal; and a third one has the _Hor-nub_ name of Thothmes I.
_Chamber (E)._
60. _Rîshi coffin._ Similar to No. 11, but of very rough workmanship.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman scantily wrapped in coarse linen.
61. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ Similar to No. 80.
Contents:--Mummy of an infant.
62. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ The outer surface of this coffin is covered with a thin paint of pinky hue. The lid is slanting on either side, has a longitudinal beam in the centre, and an upright head and foot piece on its ends (Pl. LX. 62).
Contents:--Three mummies: two were of adults lying side by side, the third of a child placed at their feet. The child’s mummy had upon its neck an amuletic necklace composed of round and barrel faience beads of red and green colour with pendant amulets of the same material, and in the centre a brown stone turtle; on the arms were bead-bangles composed of bone and faience beads; and lying near the hands, tied upon a piece of string, were two scarabs and a cowroid seal (Pl. LXXII. 62 A). One of the adult mummies had round its neck a cornelian bead necklace (Pl. LXXIII. 62); and upon the third finger of the left hand a green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 62 B).
63. _Decorated rectangular coffin._ The coloration of the detail, painted upon a strawberry-coloured ground, is similar to No. 7. On the end panels, the goddesses _Isis_ and _Nephthys_ are standing with the arms upheld (Pl. LX. 63).
Contents:--Two mummies of a man and a woman, lying side by side, and covered with a shroud. Beside the head of the woman were two grey pottery vases, and a larger one in black pottery; a dark blue faience bowl, and a wooden kohl-pot (Pl. LXVIII. 63). The woman had within the wrappings of the head a broken ivory comb (Pl. LXVIII. 63); and near the hands, lying loosely, were two cowroid seals (Pl. LXXII. 63 A). The man had no ornament upon him.
63 A. _A four-stringed musical instrument_ (Pl. LXXI. 63 A). The _neck_, _back_, and _belly_ are made of one piece of sycomore wood. The _belly_ is hollowed out like a trough, and has its two sides curved slightly inwards at the middle, thus forming a kind of waist (this was probably due to the tension of the strained skin that covered it). Across the _belly_, longitudinally, is the combined _tail-piece_ and _bridge_ to which the lower fixed ends of the strings are attached: the tapering end of this combined _tail-piece_ and _bridge_ was inserted into a socket at the juncture where the _belly_ and _neck_ join, and its lower and broader end was bound to a protuberance, made for the purpose, at the extreme end of the _belly_. Near the top end of the _neck_, and into the back of it, the four _key-pegs_ for receiving the strings are inserted. The strings themselves (their lower ends being fixed to the combined _tail-piece_ and _bridge_), which were passed along the side of the _neck_ and twisted round the _key-pegs_, had their upper ends brought over the _neck_ and slipped under the tightened portion of the strings which pressed against the side of the _neck_ (see Fig. 92, Pl. LXXI). For a _sounding-board_, skin was stretched over the whole of the _belly_, with an aperture left at the juncture of the _belly_ and _neck_ to allow the combined _tail-piece_ and _bridge_ to be inserted into its socket. The total length of the instrument is 1·37 metres. This particular specimen I believe to have been an actual instrument, while the others, Nos. 27, 28, and 92, were merely small models. With these models there are slight variations in the construction, but as the main idea is the same it is unnecessary to describe them.
64. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62, but has no traces of colour upon it.
Contents:--Mummy of a man sewn up in a shroud. Near the head a wooden head-rest; by the side a walking-staff; and under the head, wrapped in a piece of linen, were (1) a wooden kohl-pot of trefoil section, (2) a bronze razor and granular stone hone,[54] (3) a cord belt and loin cloth (Pl. LXIX. 64). On the third finger of the left hand was a blue glazed steatite scarab, mounted on gold funda: this was tied with string (Pl. LXXII. 64).
65. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62, but with no traces of colour.
Contents:--Two mummies of a man and woman, lying head to feet, and covered by a shroud. The mummy of the woman had a broken alabaster bowl (Pl. LXIX. 65) lying at the feet. The mummy of the man appeared to be re-wrapped, and had nothing on it.
66. _Rîshi coffin._ Shell--cut out of a tree trunk, and painted with black, red, and white bands. Lid--the detailed feather-decoration is painted in red, green, and dark blue on a white and yellow ground. The face is yellow. The longitudinal band down the centre has no inscription (Pl. LXII. 66).
Contents:--Mummy of a man.
67. _Rectangular child’s coffin._ This coffin had been enlarged, and the lid, which was made of old boards, was tied to pegs at either end of the shell.
Contents:--Mummy of a child, with knees bent.
_Chamber (A)._
68. _Semi-decorated anthropoid coffin._ Similar to No. 6 (Pl. LVIII. 68).
Contents:--A skeleton of a young man with hardly any traces of mummification visible.
69. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62 (Pl. LVIII. 69).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman much decayed.
70. _Rîshi coffin._ Similar to No. 66. The longitudinal band down the front has the _de hetep seten_ formula, but bears no name: space for the name has been left blank (Pl. LVIII. 70).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman lying flat on her back, with head turned towards the left. In front of the face, a wooden head-rest; under the cheek, a large bronze mirror. On the head was a wig of plaited hair (Pl. LXX. 70).
71. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62. The bottom of the coffin was not in place, and was lying on the floor, only partly under it.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman covered with a mat with long pile. On her right side, a wooden cylinder covered with leather and containing six musical reeds. These reeds were (1) 36·5 cms. long, with four notes; (2) 36·5 cms. long, with three notes; (3) 30·5 cms. long, with two notes; (4) 28 cms. long, with four notes on one side (three were intentionally blocked up with resinous material), and on the other side there was a hole or note; (5) 25 cms. long, with five notes (a crack mended with resinous material); (6) 23·5 cms. long, with five notes. The reeds average 12 mms. in thickness. Under the woman’s legs was a basket containing two flints, two lumps of clay, a reed kohl-pot and two wooden kohl-sticks, a piece of a wooden comb,[55] a splinter of wood, some bone and faience bead-bangles, and a small plaited lock of hair. In the womb were traces of an embryonic skeleton (Pl. LXIX. 71).
72. _Viscera box._ Similar to No. 20, with rounded lid (Pl. LXI. 72). No inscriptions.
Contents like Nos. 19 and 20.
73. _Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Empire._ Similar in fashion to No. 23, but rougher in detail and finish (Pls. LVIII. and LXII. 73). The lid was fixed in place by wooden pegs, and it bore the name [Illustration: hieroglyph] Aahmes.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman covered with a shroud. On the right side of the head was a broken kohl-pot; and at the top of the head, rolled in linen, a chignon, a pottery vase containing a kind of pomade which bore prints of the ancient fingers, and an ebony comb and bone hair-pin (Pl. LXX. 73). The mummy was sewn up in a sheet, which, when removed, exposed transverse bindings which continued down to the bitumenized body. The arms were crossed over the abdomen. On the head, over the natural hair, a plaited wig much decayed.
74. _Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Empire._ This coffin (Pl. LVIII. 74) is fully illustrated by Plate LXIII, Figs. 1, 2. It bears the name of [Illustration: hieroglyph] Mentu-hetep, and, among the religious formulae written upon it, gives the variant [Illustration: hieroglyph] for _Horus_.
Contents:--Mummy of a man covered with a shroud. Under the shroud, and resting upon the mummy, was a long (164 cms.) bronze snake sceptre; and on the third finger of the left hand a round-backed green glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 74) tied with string.
75. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Lid and shell made of planks of wood, with upright head and foot pieces upon the ends of lid (Pls. LVIII., LX. 75).
Contents:--Mummy of a woman with plaited hair. Round the waist was a girdle composed of two twisted strings of bone beads.
76. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman. Hair plaited; on wrists, bangles of double strings of bone and cornelian beads; on third finger of left hand a scarab (Pl. LXXII. 76), and few beads strung on thread; and tied round the fourth finger of the same hand was a small cornelian pendant drop.
_Chamber (B)._
77. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin_ (Pl. LIX. 77). Similar to No. 62.
Contents:--Three mummies covered with a shroud: one was of a man, and the other two of children. The children’s mummies were bitumenized and bound in knotted and twisted linen. The mummy of the man (bearded) had on the third finger of the left hand a scarab mounted upon a silver ring (Pl. LXXII. 77 C). The scarab, made of steatite (brown), bore an ornamental Hathor design.
78. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin_ (Pl. LIX. 78). Similar to No. 75.
Contents:--Mummy of a woman covered with a shroud. Under the head a basket containing a dark brown stone kohl-pot, an alabaster vase, and a cedar-wood comb. Near the basket were two black pottery long-necked vases (Pl. LXVIII. 78). Lying on the breast, and under the wrappings, was a small basket (Pl. LXVIII. 78) containing bone and cornelian bead-bangles (Pl. LXXIII. 78), and three scarabs and two cowroids. On the neck an amuletic necklace; and on the third finger of the left hand two gold-mounted cowroids. The scarabs were two of glazed steatite mounted in gold fundi, and one of cornelian; the cowroids were three of glass mounted in gold, and one of steatite mounted in gold (Pl. LXXII. 78). The amuletic necklace was composed of lapis-lazuli, gold, cornelian, and garnet beads, strung more or less haphazard between gold amulets (Pl. LXXIII. 78).
79. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin_ (Pl. LIX. 79). Similar to No. 75 (head and foot pieces missing and lid partly open).
Contents:--Mummy of a young woman, which appeared to have been re-wrapped. On the neck a necklace (Pl. LXXIII. 79) composed of gold, lapis-lazuli, and cornelian beads.
80. _Rectangular child’s coffin_. Square box, oblong in form, made of wooden planks. The lid had upright head and foot pieces (Pls. LIX. and LXI. 80).
Contents:--Mummy of an infant.
_South Wing._
81. _Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin_. Similar to No. 75. This coffin was open, its lid lying by its side, and was empty.
_North Wing._
82. _Two ivory castanets._ The ends shaped like human hands, and curved. They were lying in the débris of the corridor of the tomb.
_Niche (G)._
83. _Plain rectangular gable-topped coffin._ Similar to No. 62, but of small size and thinly coated with white paint. Upon the top of the coffin was a decayed mummy of a person of immature age, and with it were three gold earrings (Pl. LXIX. 83). The contents of the coffin were two children’s mummies lying one upon the other, and resting upon the top one was a small round basket (Pl. LXIX. 83) containing: (1) a wristlet of bone and cornelian beads (Pl. LXXIII. 83); (2) a necklace of bone beads (for example see 53, Pl. LXXIII.); and (3) a necklace of violet faience beads. Upon the lower mummy were two small bundles of linen containing fruit of the _nebek_-tree, which were bound together with a string of blue faience beads. This mummy had upon its left wrist(?) a bangle of bone and faience beads (Pl. LXXIII. 83).
Behind the coffin were three pots (Pl. LXXIV. G) leaning against the back wall of the niche. The niche (_G_) seems to have been specially made for these burials, which were covered up by the stone chippings made in its excavation. These burials appear to have been made in the tomb when left open after its destruction, but before it was used as a storehouse.
_Passage (L)._
84. _Dug-out anthropoid child’s coffin_. The shell, cut out of a tree stem, was very roughly made. The lid was missing.
Contents:--Mummy of an infant decayed, and among the débris were minute blue faience and gold beads (Pl. LXXIII. 84).
_Central Passage._
85. _An ivory castanet._ Burnt, and with end shaped like a human hand; it differed from No. 82 by being straight. This was found in the layer of rubbish that covered the floor of the passage. It appears to belong to the original interment of the tomb.
_Hall (C)._
86. _A wooden statuette and fragment of a wooden coffin of the Middle Kingdom._ The statuette, broken, is covered with stucco and painted, and is of exceedingly coarse workmanship. It represents a woman carrying upon her head a linen basket. The fragment of coffin bore an inscription reading [Illustration: hieroglyph] _perkheru_-offerings for the devoted one _Henŷt_. These antiquities were found in the layer of rubbish that covered the floor, and probably belong to the original interment of the tomb (some parts of the statuette came from the small chamber _F_).
87. _A wooden jewel-box._ This is similar to the box found in tomb No. 24 (Pl. XLVI).
Contents:--A _ka-hetep_ amulet and necklace of blue faience (Pl. LXXIII. 87); a necklace of white and violet cylindrical faience beads (Pl. LXXIII. 87); a blue glazed steatite scarab (Pl. LXXII. 87); a blue glazed steatite kohl-pot, made to imitate matrix of turquoise; a reel of white faience; and a copper fillet for the hair (see tomb No. 25, p. 55). These objects are all of the Middle Kingdom period, and were discovered in the layer of rubbish covering the floor of the chamber. They probably belonged to the original interment.
_Pit (D)._
88. _Panel stela._ Covered with white stucco and painted. It measures 45 × 27 cms. (see Chapter XIII, by Dr. Möller).
89. _Panel stela._ Similar to No. 88, and measures 57 × 22 cms. (see Chapter XIII, by Dr. Möller).
90. _Panel stela._ Similar to Nos. 88 and 89, but of much thicker wood, and badly broken (see Chapter XIII, by Dr. Möller).
_Chamber (F)._
91. _Broken shafts of arrows, parts of bows, a wooden mallet, and a wooden hoe._ These antiquities came from the rubbish in chamber _F_, at the bottom of pit _D_.
92. _Parts of a four-stringed musical instrument._ See No. 63 A, also Pl. LXXI. 92.
_Pottery._ Examples of the different kinds of pottery vessels found in this tomb are figured in Pl. LXXIV.
The letters and figures refer to the lettering on the Plan (Pl. LV). The four specimens marked GEN. came from the corridor and passage.
In the right corner of the plate are examples of mud-sealings found in the rubbish that covered the floor.
_Pit Tombs Nos. 38 and 39._
Both these are of common pit-tomb type, and were possibly made for the retainers of the owner of tomb No. 37. They were carefully examined but found to be plundered. Only a few fragments of pottery vessels similar to those from tombs No. 24 and 25 were found in the sand filling them (Pl. XXX).
_Tomb No. 41._
A large tomb south of No. 37. This has not yet been excavated or examined, for it was only discovered a few days before ending the work of season 1911 (Pl. XXX).