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Statuette of Maneless Baboon
View through Harvard Museums
Department of Ancient and Byzantine Art & Numismatics
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum Gift of Mr. and Mrs. William de Forest Thomson
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Statuette of a Baboon
Statuette of a Baboon
As the hieroglyphic writing around all four sides of its base tells us, this statuette was dedicated to the god Thoth and inscribed for a man named Paser. It may have stood in a te...
Canopic Jar of Pafhernetjer with Lid in Shape of a Baboon Head
Canopic Jar of Pafhernetjer with Lid in Shape of a Baboon Head
This jar has a lid in the shape of a baboon’s head. The hieroglyphic inscription, incised in four neat columns and painted black, refers to the god Hapy. Given that Hapy is both ba...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...
Statue of a seated baboon
Statue of a seated baboon
Limestone paint, Late Period–Ptolemaic Period...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...

