Magic knife fragments

Magic knife fragments

An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Magical wands are typically found in Middle Kingdom burials. Many are decorated with incised figures of protective demons and deities, and inscriptions refer to the protection of children. Some show traces of wear on the tips. It has been suggested that these were instruments used in magic performances aimed at the protection of children. As parts of burial equipments they would then have served to procure rebirth for the deceased. The three fragments of this magical wand were found in shaft tomb 466 at Lisht North. In the same thoroughly plundered shaft system was also found a statuette, now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo (JE 45245, published Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art 10, October 1914, p. 200 with fig. 8 on p. 217). This statuette can be dated on the evidence of its inscription to Dynasty 13, and some pottery vessels from the same shaft are from the same late Middle Kingdom period. Two kohl jars (for one of them see 22.1.849), however, also from the same shaft system are of early 12th dynasty date. These may either be heirlooms included in the late Middle Kingdom burials, or burials in the shaft system, which comprised three chambers, extended over a considerable time. Since all objects were discovered scattered throughout the debris filling the shaft and chambers, it can no longer be determined whether the the magical wand was originally associated with the statuette or the kohl pots and its date is, therefore, not entirely certain.


Egyptian Art

An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Magic knife fragmentsMagic knife fragmentsMagic knife fragmentsMagic knife fragmentsMagic knife fragments

The Met collection of ancient Egyptian art consists of approximately 30,000 objects of artistic, historical, and cultural importance, dating from about 300,000 BCE to the 4th century CE. A signifcant percentage of the collection is derived from the Museum's three decades of archaeological work in Egypt, initiated in 1906 in response to increasing interest in the culture of ancient Egypt.