Breaking the ds̆r.t-vessels : an ancient Egyptian fragmentation rite / Elena L. Hertel

'Breaking the dsr.t-vessels' was a funerary rite that involved the intentional damaging of a certain type of ceramic vessel. The aim of this study is to gain a better understanding of the rite through a re-evaluation of the primary sources and previous research and to provide the first stu...

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Place / Publishing House:Oxford : Archaeopress, [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Physical Description:iv, 94 Seiten; Illustrationen, Diagramme
Notes:Enthält Literaturangaben: Seite 88-94
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Summary:'Breaking the dsr.t-vessels' was a funerary rite that involved the intentional damaging of a certain type of ceramic vessel. The aim of this study is to gain a better understanding of the rite through a re-evaluation of the primary sources and previous research and to provide the first study devoted entirely to the rite.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Information -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Figure 1. Comparison of PT 244 with spells for purification, anointing, the ritual offering of food and drink, and the Opening of the Mouth Ritual -- Figure 2. Chronological distribution of textual, iconographical, and archaeological sources of pottery fragmentation contexts. -- Figure 3. dšr.t-Vessels on Middle Kingdom Coffins. Photographs © by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, in the collection of the Netherlands Institute for the Near East, Leiden, De Buck archive -- Figure 4. Shape of the dšr.wt depicted in the Middle Kingdom -- Figure 5. Shape of the dšr.wt classifier in the Middle Kingdom -- Figure 6. Shape of dšr.wt depictions and classifiers in the New Kingdom -- Figure 7. dšr.t-Vessels among tools for the Opening of the Mouth Ritual (above) and the offering of food and drink (below) in the forecourt of TT 75. Photographs: Schott-Photos No. 1963 and 1964 © Schott Archiv (Ägyptologie Universität Trier) -- Figure 8. dšr.t-Vessels and nms.t-Vessels found in Giza (after Reisner 1955, Pl. 46e) -- Figure 9. Attestations of CT 926 on Middle Kingdom coffins. Photographs © by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, in the collection of the Netherlands Institute for the Near East, Leiden, De Buck archive -- Figure 10. Vessel breaking scene in the tomb of Horemheb at Saqqara -- Figure 11. Present and absent elements in the New Kingdom vessel-breaking scenes -- Figure 12. Shape of vessels in the New Kingdom vessel-breaking scenes -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Goal and Definition -- On the Necessity of a Re-Evaluation -- Methodology and Structure -- The BdV in Egyptological Literature -- History of Previous Research -- Phase 1: Identification -- Phase 2: Contextualisation -- Phase 3: Attribution of Archaeological Evidence.
ISBN:9781803275871
ac_no:AC17053184
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Elena L. Hertel