Juglet

Unknown Egyptian, Egyptian

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1550-1400 BCE

Pottery with polished black slip

Overall: 2 5/8 × 3 3/4 in. (6.7 × 9.5 cm)

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Museum Purchase

39.64.6702

Geography

Place Made: Egypt, Northern Africa, Africa

Object Name

Vessel

Research Area

Ancient Egypt

Africa

On view

Label

Like the Cypriot head of a bearded man elsewhere in this gallery, these small vessels are votives rather than toys or models. Some, like the miniature amphora or pottery juglet, may have held oil or wine as an additional offering and suggest the typical use of the full-sized vessels they imitate. Others, like the miniature kylix, reference social practices such as feasts that would be held in the divine realms or the afterlife. These small objects connect everyday experiences with those realms.

From the exhibition, Stone, Sand, and Clay: Connecting Cultures in the Ancient Mediterranean, curated by Ashley B. Offill, Curator of Collections

Exhibition History

Stone, Sand, and Clay: Connecting Cultures in the Ancient Mediterranean, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, June 7, 2025 - Ongoing

Provenance

British School of Archaeology in Egypt (University College, London); Museum and Art Gallery Reading, England; sold to present collection, 1939.

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