The term
“Coffin” is usually applied to the rectangular or anthropoid container in which
the Egyptians placed the mummified body, whereas the word “Sarcophagus” (Greek:
“Flesh-Eating”) is used to refer only to the stone outer container, invariably
encasing one or more coffins. The
distinction made between these two items of Egyptian funerary equipment is
therefore essentially an artificial one, since both shared the same role of
protecting the body of the deceased. In
terms of decoration and shape, coffins and sarcophagi drew on roughly the same
iconographic stylistic repertoire.
The earliest
burials in Egypt contain no coffins and were naturally desiccated by the hot
sand. The separation of the body of
deceased from the surrounding sand by the use of a coffin or sarcophagus
ironically led to the deterioration of the body, perhaps stimulating
developments in mummification. The
religious purpose of the coffin was to ensure the well-being of the deceased in
the afterlife, literally providing a “house” for the “Ka”.
The earliest
coffins were baskets or simple plank constructions in which the body was placed
in a flexed position. From these
developed and valuated house-shaped coffins that remained in use into the
fourth Dynasty (2613 – 2494 BC). At
around this time, the Egyptians began to bury the deceased body in an extended
position, perhaps because the increasingly common practice of evisceration made
such an arrangement more suitable. By
the end of the Old Kingdom (2181 BC), food offerings were being painted on the
inside of coffins as an extra means of providing sustenance for the deceased in
the event of the tomb chapel being destroyed or neglected. In the Old & Middle Kingdom, a pair of
eyes was often painted on the side of the coffin that faced east when it was
placed in the tomb. It was evidently
believed that the deceased could therefore look out of the coffin to see his or
her offerings and the world from which he or she had passed, as well as to view
the rising Sun.
Decorated
coffins became still more important in the First Intermediate Period (2181 –
2055 BC), when many tombs contained little mural decoration. It was thus essential that coffins themselves
should incorporate the basic elements of the tomb and by the Middle Kingdom
(2055 – 1650 BC), they often incorporated revised extracts of the Pyramid
Texts, known as the coffin texts. This
change reflects the increased identification of the afterlife with Osiris,
rather than the Sun-God “Ra”.
Anthropoid coffins
first appeared in the 12th Dynasty (1985 – 1795 BC), apparently serving as
substitute bodies lest the original be destroyed. With the New Kingdom (1550 – 1069 BC), this
form of coffins became more popular and the shape became identified with Osiris
himself; his beard and crossed arms sometimes being added. The feathered, rishi coffins of the 17th and
early 18th Dynasty were once thought to depict the wings of the goddess Isis,
embracing her husband Osiris, but are now considered by some scholars to refer
to the BA bird. Rectangular coffins were
effectively replaced by anthropoid types in the 18th Dynasty; but some of their
decorative elements were retained.
In the Third
Intermediate Period (1069 – 747 BC), coffins, papyri and stelae became the main
vehicles for funerary scenes that had previously been carved and painted on the
walls of tomb chapels. The principal
feature of most of the new scenes depicted on coffins was the Osirian and solar
mythology surrounding the concept of rebirth, including the judgment of the
deceased before Osiris and the journey into the underworld, the voyage of the
Solar Bark and parts of the Litany of Ra.
Among the new scenes introduced in the decoration of coffins and on
funerary papyri was the depiction of the separation of the earth-god Geb from
the sky-goddess Nut.
The excavation
of the 21st & 22nd Dynasty royal tombs at Tanis has provided a number of
examples of the royal coffins of the period (although the sarcophagi were
sometimes reused from the New Kingdom).
The cache of mummies of high priests of Amun at Deir el-Bahri has also
yielded a large number of private coffins of the 21st Dynasty (1069 – 945
BC). It was also from the end of the New
Kingdom onwards that the interiors of the coffins began to be decorated again;
beneath the lid-especially in the 22nd Dynasty (945 – 715 BC), there was often
a representation of Nut, while the “goddess of the West”, Hathor, or the Djed
Pillar began to be portrayed on the coffin floor. During the Late Period, extracts from the
Book of the Dead were sometimes also inscribed inside the coffin.
In the 25th
Dynasty a new repertoire of coffin types, usually consisting of sets of two or
three (including an inner case with pedestal, an intermediate anthropoid outer
coffin), was introduced, becoming established practice by the 26th
Dynasty. Late Period coffins were
characterized by archaism, involving the reintroduction of the earlier styles
of coffin decoration, such as the provision of the eye panel.
There are
comparatively few excavated burials dating from c.525 to 350 BC, but more
coffins have survived from the succeeding phase (30th Dynasty and early
Ptolemaic Period), when they typically have disproportionately large heads and
wigs. During the early Ptolemaic Period,
many mummies were provided with cartonnage masks and plaques, fixed on to the
body by strips of line.
No comments:
Post a Comment