Légende
Jug, ceramics, Egyptian clay vessel jug — small jug with one handle; widest about 2/3 of the vessel's height. Wide, rather sloping shoulders; short neck widening toward the spout; straight, slightly flaring spout. Lower handle attached slightly above the vessel's widest diameter; upper attachment reaches the spout, protruding 1 cm above the spout line. Handle circular in cross-section on the lower part, slightly flattened in the upper part. Slightly convex bottom. Made of Nile clay. Surface even and covered with a thick layer of red slip on the outside and on the rim and neck inside. Color red-brown. Complete and fairly well preserved; slip worn away in places. Dating and origin: ca. 2686–2181 BC, Old Kingdom; Edfu. Measurements: height 12.7 cm; rim diameter 8.4 cm; body diameter 13.5 cm; bottom diameter 9.5 cm. Analogies: A. Fakhry, The Monuments of Sneferu at Dahshur, figs. 4–4., A round, shallow vessel viewed from above with a textured, worn surface showing earthy tones of reddish-brown and patches of lighter beige, set against a plain mid-gray background; the rim and interior show variations in the reddish-brown color with small pits and flecks of lighter material, and there are subtle darker spots and smudges on the surface.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A04_422
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
80.8Mo (1.8Mo) / 45.0cm x 45.0cm / 5314 x 5314 (300dpi)