Canopic Jar and Cover of Lady Senebtisi
Description
Object Label: Priests separately mummified the stomach, liver, lungs, and intestines, to be placed in jars, in the most expensive method of mummification described by Herodotus. The practice of removing the organs and packing them separately declined in the Middle Kingdom and later, yet Egyptians still included canopic jars in burials. And while the covers of Middle Kingdom canopic jars all have human heads, by the New Kingdom the jars of the royal scribe of Ramesses II, named Tjuli, had human, baboon, jackal, and falcon heads. Caption: Canopic Jar and Cover of Lady Senebtisi, ca. 1938–1759 B.C.E.. Limestone, pigment, 15 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (39.4 x 21.6 cm) 15 9/16 in. (39.5 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Museum Collection Fund, 14.662a-b. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
AI image analysis GPT-4o-2024-08-06
Machine-generated from the object's image on May 2026. Not curatorial; treat deities, names, and signs below as the model's best reading, not authority.
A limestone canopic jar with a human-headed lid.
The artifact is a canopic jar made from limestone, featuring a human-headed lid that is finely carved. The face on the lid is detailed, suggesting it may represent one of the Four Sons of Horus. The jar is smooth and well-preserved, with subtle wear marks indicative of age.
Cross-references (2)
- BKM-Accession 14.662a-b tier-2
- BKM-Object 3118 tier-2
About this record's data
- From the source institution — accession, description, dimensions, and dating are as catalogued by Brooklyn Museum — Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art.
- AI-inferred — the image-analysis panel (deities, names, signs) is machine-generated and may be wrong.
- Approximate location — most map points are plotted at the site centroid, not the exact findspot.
- Inferred links — cross-references marked with a match method other than explicit-source-field were matched by us, not stated by the source.