sarcophagus1.jpeg
sarcophagus1.jpeg sarcophagus2.jpeg sarcophagus3_4H5TvPQ.jpeg sarcophagus4.jpeg

This black granite sarcophagus was uncovered in the burial chamber of the Tomb of Queen Meresankh III. Inside was found the body of Queen Meresankh, mostly disassembled and just bones and mummy wrappings–the mummy was not preserved.

Unfortunately, the lid had already been opened, probably by tomb robbers, and the coffins that would have been placed inside the sarcophagus were stolen along with many of the other offerings that Meresankh had been buried with.

The sarcophagus was carved from a single piece of black granite and decorated with elaborate hieroglyphs and carvings.

The sarcophagus was inscribed with the name of Queen Hetepheres II, the mother of Queen Meresankh III, but the name of Hetepheres was scratched out and nearby was written “I give this sarcophagus to Meresankh, who was loved.” This led many to believe that Meresankh had an early and unexpected death, before that of her mother’s.


Tomb equipment-Coffins and sarcophagi
Grand Egyptian Museum
06/05/1927
Grand Egyptian Museum
Height: 81 cm; lid: 16 cm Width: 90 cm Length: 218 cm Weight: 4131 kg
G 7530-7540: pit G 7530 A
GEM_45475
Granite
In the collection of: Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM_45475, formerly EMC_JE_54935)
Old Kingdom, Dynasty 4, reign of Khufu
Grand Egyptian Museum

Topics

📢 Notice! Please don't close this message.

We humbly ask for your help. We need your support to keep Mused running.

We're the largest independent hub of digital cultural heritage, and we survive on donations of about $30 USD. Less than 1% of people donate. If everyone reading this donated $5, our fundraiser would be done within a day!

We support training and providing technology to the communities that take of the monuments where we work to digitize their own cultures. For the price of a cup of coffee, you can continue preserving cultural heritage for future generations.

Thanks for reading, and we hope you'll consider donating. — Luke Hollis, Cofounder, Mused