Log in to see this item in other languages
Base of the coffin of Pakepu
The base of a set of nested coffins made for Pakepu, a water pourer (wAH-mw) on the West of Thebes. Both of his coffins are simply and sparsely painted with religious scenes and bands of text. This dates to the 25th-26th dynasties of the Kushite-Late Period.
Found in Thebes (Egypt) and given to the Fitzwilliam Museum in 1869 by Edward (VII), Prince of Wales.
Creator
- fitzwilliammuseum
Subject
- Cultural Heritage & History
- egypt
- egyptian
- coffins
- funerary containers
- funerary objects
- archaeological objects
- Archaeological artifact
Type of item
- 3D
Creator
- fitzwilliammuseum
Subject
- Cultural Heritage & History
- egypt
- egyptian
- coffins
- funerary containers
- funerary objects
- archaeological objects
- Archaeological artifact
Type of item
- 3D
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Rights
- The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge
Creation date
- 2018
- 2018
Temporal
- Circa 680 BC - Circa 664 BC
Places
- Luxor, Egypt
Provenance
- 354 photographs, Sony A6000 taken in gallery, no lights. Processed in Agisoft Photoscan using medium settings.; Photogrammetry
Identifier
- share3d:1154
- share3d:1154
Format
- glTF
Language
- English
- en
Is part of
- Share3D
- United Kingdom
Relations
- Account of Coffins and Mummies Discovered in Egypt on the Occasion of the Visit of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales in 1868-9
Year
- 2018
Providing country
- United Kingdom
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2022-08-01T14:54:51.981Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2024-12-09T11:24:27.667Z