12 results filtered with: Funerary rites

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A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon

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Hired bannermen partaking in a funeral procession.
John Thomson
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Limestone human-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represent Imsety, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian for the liver.

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- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon

- Digital Images
- Online
Profile view of a mummified male head

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Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach

- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon

- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon

- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone human-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represent Imsety, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian for the liver.

- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon

- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone human headed canopic jar

- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach