Harvard Art Museums > 2019.354: Ushabti of Nesbanebdjed Sculpture Collections Search Exit Deep Zoom Mode Zoom Out Zoom In Reset Zoom Full Screen Add to Collection Order Image Copy Link Copy Citation Citation"Ushabti of Nesbanebdjed , 2019.354,” Harvard Art Museums collections online, Nov 24, 2024, https://hvrd.art/o/367944. Reuse via IIIF Toggle Deep Zoom Mode Download This object does not yet have a description. Identification and Creation Object Number 2019.354 Title Ushabti of Nesbanebdjed Classification Sculpture Work Type statuette, sculpture Date 380-343 BCE Places Creation Place: Ancient & Byzantine World, Africa, Egypt (Ancient) Period Late Period, Dynasty 30, to Ptolemaic Culture Egyptian Persistent Link https://hvrd.art/o/367944 Location Location Level 3, Room 3740, Ancient Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Art, Ancient Egypt: Art for Eternity View this object's location on our interactive map Physical Descriptions Medium Faience Technique Mold-made Dimensions 19.7 cm (7 3/4 in.) Inscriptions and Marks label: Wraps around front and sides of Ushabti: [1] sHD wsir imy-xnt wp nTr.wi Hm-nTr wsir m anp xnty Hmw nTr imy-r [2] wab sxmt HAt-mHyt Hm-nTr bA-nb-Dd ns-bA-nb-Dd ms [n] Sntyt mAa-xrw Dd=f i.wSb [3] ty ipn ir ip.tw wsir imy-xnt wp nTr.wi Hm-nTr wsir m [4] anp xnty Hmw nTr imy-r wab sxmt HAt-mHyt Hm-nTr bA-nb-Dd ns-bA-nb-Dd [5] ms [n] Sntyt mAa-xrw [r irt] kAt [-nbt irt im] m Xrt-nTr is.t[w.tn] [6] Hw sDbw im m s r Xrt=f [7] mk -sw mk -wi kA=tn ip.tw [8] r nw -nb irt [tw] im r srwD sxwt [9] r smHy wDbw r Xnt Say [10] imntt iAbtt Ts[-pXr] irtt mk -wi kA=tn [1] May the Osiris, the chamberlain, the one who separates the Two Gods, the priest of Osiris in Thmuis, the foremost of priests, the overseer of [2] the wab-priests of Sekhmet in Mendes, the priest of Banebdjed, Nesbanebdjed, born to Shentyt, justified, shine. He says: O these [3] ushabtis, if counted upon by the Osiris, the chamberlain, the one who separates the Two Gods, the priest of Osiris in [4] Thmuis, the foremost of priests, the overseer of the priests of Sekhmet in Mendes, the priest of Banebdjed, Nesbanebdjed, [5] born to Shentyt, justified, [to do all] the works that are to be done [there] in the necropolis; if [you] are summoned [6] to defeat an obstacle implanted there, as a man at his duties, [7] "here he is, here I am," you shall say when you are counted upon, [8] "at any time to serve [you] there, to maintain the fields, [9] to irrigate the riverbanks, to ferry the sand of [10] the west [to] the east and vice[-versa], Here I am," you shall say. Provenance Recorded Ownership History [Ralph M. Blanchard Antiquities, Cairo, (by 1905)], sold; to Miss. Richardson, (1905 - ?). [Marjorie Jones, Suffolk Gallery, Camden, Maine], sold; to [Ross Levett Antiques, Thomaston, Maine (by 2011)], sold; to [Ward & Company Works of Art, New York, (2011-2012)], sold; to Eric Kaufman, Weston, CT, (2012-2019), gift; to the Harvard Art Museums. Acquisition and Rights Credit Line Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Gift of Eric R. Kaufman, L. '67 Accession Year 2019 Object Number 2019.354 Division Asian and Mediterranean Art Contact am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu Permissions The Harvard Art Museums encourage the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request. Descriptions Description Light blue-green faience ushabti of the overseer of the priests of Sekhmet in Mendes and priest of the ram god Banebdjed, Nesbanebdjed. The ushabti wears a braided, curved false beard, identifying him with the god Osiris. His hands are crossed on the front of his chest and the edge of his cloak is visible between them. The presence of the cloak further identifies the figure as mummiform and therefore deceased. The ushabti holds a pick in his left hand; in his right hand he holds a hoe and the cord for a bag of seeds that drapes over his left shoulder. A pillar is present on the back of the statuette. The back-pillar, seed bag over the left shoulder, possession of two different implements in the hands, and “Greek” smile are all stylistic indicators of a Late Period date. Ten lines of text in horizontal registers, consisting of the ushabti spell with the name and titles of Nesbanebdjed, surround the body. Commentary Nesbanebdjed’s burial was excavated at Tell er-Rub’a (ancient Mendes) in the Nile Delta by British Egyptologist James E. Quibell. The tomb was paved with limestone blocks. 360 faience ushabtis, and fragments of others, were recovered from the tomb. They comprised five types: 15 with a “very well modelled” horizontal inscription--of which this ushabti was one; 322 with a T-shaped inscription on the front of the body; 10 with 6 lines of inscription (presumably horizontal), “rudely made”; 5 with one line of inscription (presumably vertical); and 10 with no inscription, “rudely made.” All of those with inscriptions bore Nesbanebdjed’s name. Quibell suggested that the uninscribed ones, of which there were a large number of fragments, may have belonged to a burial discovered next to Nesbanebdjed’s, which is presumed to have been looted in antiquity. For other ushabtis belonging to Nesbanebdjed, see: •With the horizontal inscription: Royal Athena Galleries, New York (Art of the Ancient World, vol. 20, 2009, 87, no. 197) •With the T-shaped inscription: one in Leiden (Schneider, Shabtis, 1977, II 184-5 and III pl. 61, with list of examples in other museums and collections), one at the British Museum (EA54532), two at the Frank H. McClung Museum at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and another sold by Sothebys New York December 2008, lot 4. Bibliography M. James Edward Quibell, “Note on a tomb found at Tell er Robâ,” Annales du Service des Antiquités de l’Égypte 3 (Cairo 1902), 245-249 Jacques François Aubert and Liliane Aubert, Statuettes égyptiennes (Paris 1974), 255, pl. 66, figs. 155-156 Hans D. Schneider, Shabtis (Leiden 1977), vol. 2, 184-185, and vol. 3, pl. 61 Jean-Luc Chappaz and Jacques Chamay, Reflets du divin: Antiquités pharaoniques et classiques d'une collection privée (Geneva 2001), no. 73c Glenn Janes, Shabtis: A Private View (Paris 2002), no. 96. Exhibition History 32Q: 3740 Egyptian, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 06/01/2022 - 05/01/2026 32Q: 3620 University Study Gallery, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 09/04/2021 - 01/02/2022 Verification Level This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of Asian and Mediterranean Art at am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu