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Green glazed composition Egyptian shabti.
Shabti
Green glazed composition Egyptian shabti.
Green glazed composition Egyptian shabti.
The Cuming Museum.

Shabti

Date1550-332 BC
MediumFaience
DimensionsObject/Work: 46 x 20 mm
ClassificationsReligious/Ritual Equipment
Terms
    Object numberC07326
    DescriptionGreen glazed composition shabti. The figure wears a short wig and holds a flail.

    A shabti was a kind of servant figure that was buried with the deceased and found in elite burials from the New Kingdom. In the afterlife the deceased was expected to help maintain the 'reed fields' where they would be living in the afterlife. If the deceased was called on to do manual labour the shabtis would take his place. To this end they were often depicted holding tools in their hands.

    Shabtis were commonly made of stone, wood, plaster, and faience. The number of shabtis included in a burial changed over the course of Egyptian history; in the 18th dynasty, only one shabti was common, but by the Third Intermediate Period they could have one for every day of the year!

    Some were inscribed only with the name and title of their master while others contained an inscription known as the 'shabti spell' or chapter 6 of the Book of Coming Forth by Day, better known as the Book of the Dead. This spell would make them answer when their master was called on to work. The word shabti means 'answerer'.

    On View
    Not on view
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Ancient Egyptain figure of Sa-Khons
    Henry Salt
    1550-332 BC
    Ancient Egyptian carved wooden figure of Rasses, a royal scribe.
    Henry Salt
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    James Burton
    1142-1132 BC
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    James Burton
    1142-1132 BC
    Shabti
    James Burton
    1142-1132 BC
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    1550-332 BC
    Shabti
    Giovanni Battista Belzoni
    1388-1350 BC