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Egyptian Limestone Jar
New York | Vessels
 
Date:  3500 BC - 2500 BC
Culture:  Egyptian
Category:  Vessels
Medium:  Stone
Dimension: H: 5.5 cm
Price: $4,000.00
Provenance: Ex- Private English Collection
Serial No: 17341

This jar is of beautifully veined pink limestone. It is ovoid in shape with two lug handles pierced by small drill-made holes. Its broad lip is flat and flaring, and its base is flat. Bowls such as ours, modeled in terracotta or carved in stone, were common in the late 4th and early 3rd millennia B.C. Their size was variable, ranging from miniatures (like our example) to large vessels more than 20 cm in height and 15 cm in diameter.

These stone vessels were principally used as containers for unguents and cosmetic oils, kept fresh by the thickness and impermeability of the jars’ walls. These ointments not only had many everyday uses (for medicinal purposes), but were also of utmost importance in religious rituals (as temple offerings, for the daily anointment of statues and cult objects) and in the funerary sphere (for the preparation of mummies, since they were believed to have a rejuvenating and generative effect). Therefore, it is not surprising that a significant quantity of these stone containers, where found in sanctuaries and funerary settings.

All e-Tiquities have been searched in the Art Loss Register database.