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, 36.3.9. (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.
An ancient Egyptian artifact with a turquoise and black marbled pattern.
This artifact appears to be a small, free-standing object with a unique marbled turquoise and black pattern. Its shape is irregular with smooth contours, suggesting it might have served as a decorative or symbolic item. The stone or faience composition indicates it could be part of ancient Egyptian ornamental craftsmanship.
Cross-references (2)
- BKM-Accession 36.3.9 tier-2
- BKM-Object 3384 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.