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Lot n° 44

Mask; Egypt, Ptolemaic period, 332-30 BC. Polychrome...

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Mask; Egypt, Ptolemaic period, 332-30 BC. Polychrome wood. There are material losses on the chin. Surface wear. It has pigment losses in some parts. Measurements: 32 x 20 x 12 cm. Mummy mask representing the deceased with a reddish skin tone, a rounded, triangular, expressive face, thin, pursed lips with a slight smile, a thin, aquiline nose, almond-shaped eyes and arched eyebrows highlighted in black. The main function of Egyptian funerary masks was to allow the identification of the deceased, which is why they were placed covering the head of the mummy. In addition, Chapter 151 of the Book of the Dead recalls that the funerary mask is an essential element in the protection of the head of the deceased. The first funerary masks were the stone "reserve heads" of the 4th Dynasty, which served as a substitute for the head of the deceased. Excavations have uncovered a number of plaster masks from the end of the Late Antique Empire, moulded over the face of the deceased in order to preserve their memory. The royal masks, most often made of gold, were often decorated with semi-precious stones and fragments of vitreous paste. The mask is therefore an important part of the funerary rites of Ancient Egypt, forming part of an elaborate series of rituals that were considered necessary to ensure immortality after death. These rites and protocols included mummification, the casting of magic spells and the inclusion of very specific objects in the tombs, which were thought to be needed in the afterlife.