Game Piece
Description
Object Label: Senet (the passing) was one of the most popular and enduring board games in ancient Egypt. Players moved their gaming pieces along a rectangular board of thirty squares arranged in three parallel rows. Although this blue glazed faience board resembles the traditional senet playing surface, it has only twenty-one squares. Perhaps it was intended as a funerary offering that merely represented a senet board. Although the board and “pawns” displayed here may have formed a set, they could have been assembled from several sources. Caption: Game Piece, ca. 1938–1700 B.C.E.. Faience, 1 1/8 x Diam. 11/16 in. (2.9 x 1.7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 36.3.7. (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 cone-shaped object with an alternating blue and black swirl pattern.
The object appears to be a small, cone-shaped artifact made from a material that gives a glazed appearance, likely faience. It features a distinctive blue and black wavy swirl pattern across its surface. The styling is elegant and the use of color suggests it may have been decorative in nature. The form is smooth and well-preserved, without noticeable damage.
Cross-references (2)
- BKM-Accession 36.3.7 tier-2
- BKM-Object 3382 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.