Spool-Shaped Gaming Piece, Tomb of Neferkhawet ca. 1504–1447 New Kingdom A family tomb, established by a man named Neferkhawet, was excavated by the Egyptian Expedition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1935. One of the last people buried in the tomb was a woman whose name was not recorded on any of the objects in the tomb. Inside her coffin was an incomplete set of gaming pieces, five spool-shaped like this one and five conical. These would have been used to play the games senet and 20-squares. No trace of an accompanying game box was recorded by the excavators. The coffin itself was


Spool-Shaped Gaming Piece, Tomb of Neferkhawet ca. 1504–1447 New Kingdom A family tomb, established by a man named Neferkhawet, was excavated by the Egyptian Expedition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1935. One of the last people buried in the tomb was a woman whose name was not recorded on any of the objects in the tomb. Inside her coffin was an incomplete set of gaming pieces, five spool-shaped like this one and five conical. These would have been used to play the games senet and 20-squares. No trace of an accompanying game box was recorded by the excavators. The coffin itself was badly damaged by rot and insects, so remains of a wooden game box may have been indistinguishable from the five conical game pieces are quite uniform in shape, size, and color. Four of the spool-shaped pieces are also quite similar, but this oneis different enough that it may have been a replacement Spool-Shaped Gaming Piece, Tomb of Neferkhawet. ca. 1504–1447 Faience. New Kingdom. From Egypt, Upper Egypt, Thebes, Asasif, Tomb of Neferkhawet (MMA 729), east chamber, Burial VIII, inside coffin, MMA excavations, 1934–35. Dynasty 18, early


Size: 3200px × 4000px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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