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Worker Shabti of Nauny

Worker Shabti of Nauny

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Date
ca. 1050 B.C.
Medium
Faience
Dimensions
H 8.7 × W 3.1 × D 1.8 cm (3 7/16 × 1 1/4 × 11/16 in.)
Department
Egyptian Art
Gallery
126
Location
126
Credit
Rogers Fund, 1930

Description

Overview Worker Shabti of Nauny Third Intermediate Period ca. 1050 B.C. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 126 Almost 400 small funerary figures known as shabtis were found with Nauny’s burial. These can be seen as avatars, meant to carry out agricultural labor on Nauny’s behalf in the afterlife. Of the 393 shabtis discovered, 355 were workers like this one, and 37 were overseers (see for example 30.3.28.3). Based on other assemblages from this era, Nauny originally might have had a total of 365 workers, one for each day of the year. This mummiform figure holds a hoe in each hand and has a basket on its back. The inscription on the front of the body reads, "the Osiris Nauny, true of voice." This indicated that Nauny had been transformed through the process of mummification and identified with the principal god of the dead, and then had been judged to have led an ethical life. Nauny’s shabtis were divided between seven boxes. Five of these, with their shabtis, were given to The Met, while two were sent to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. View more