Essex. Photo: postcardsbyhannah
One Nice Bug Per Day
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Today's Document

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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

blake kathryn

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Mike Driver
RMH

Janaina Medeiros

JBB: An Artblog!
🪼
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almost home

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

Origami Around
DEAR READER

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@sumbitch212
Essex. Photo: postcardsbyhannah
Granodiorite cube with relief of Nebnefer, an official of the 18th Dynasty during the reign of Amenhotep III. The goddess on the front is Hathor.
New Kingdom, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1391-1353 BC. From Sobek Temple in Sumenu northwest of Luxor. Now in the Crocodile Museum, Kom Ombo. J 136
Imagine if you will, being a dying Egyptian lady. I mean not dying right now but soon to be dead. As such you arrange your burial with the local priest of the mortuary cult and the various officiants present you with the furniture for the grave, the sarcophagus and all that stuff. Money is tight so you agree to use recycled linen to be used as mummy material and they present you that shit.
That shit is the single existing liber linteus to date. It's a book, not an Egyptian one, but an Etruscan one from Italy. Not much is known about the book, if not that is some sort of sacred calendar. We (arguably) don't know much about the Etruscan language, being this one the longest text we have found to date, translation is not the easiest task. Nevertheless this find was extraordinary.
Now what I truly find interesting is not the book per se (that's not true I find it very interesting) but the fact that a mummy was bandaged in it. Considering the fact that Egyptians' belief attributed an immense power to written words, why this lady agreed to be mummified in a damn book with lots of foreign words on it?
One could argue that, given the dates, this lady was factually Egyptian, but more Hellenistic than anything. Or that she was poor AF and had to get whatever she could get to be mummified properly. I also heard somewhere that she might have not seen the writing upon the linen sheet because it would have been whitened before using it. Sadly, since we don't know shit about the mummy, because it was for sure legitimately excavated with incredible legitimacy and care, we will never know.
What I like to think instead is that the local embalmer just successfully bullshited this lady.
- What are those symbols on the sheet?
- Just some writings, don't think about them
- And what do they say?
- Good things about the mummy and the afterlife
- Wdym? Are those magical words?
- It's a good fortune enchantment
- I don't recognise the language
- it's Roman (????)
- Wtf Is a Roman???
Absolute comedy
Lou, hair brushed · Canon AE1 & Agfa APX400
© Chill
· IG & Tumblr for censored stuff · My portfolio for uncensored stuff
Richard Anuszkiewicz Visible State 1966
Borgund Stave Church, Norway. Built approx. 1200 C.E.
2000 year-old Roman face cream/lotion. Dating back to II AD. Object was found in the temple complex dedicated to Mars. It’s world’s oldest cosmetic face cream and it has finger marks in the lid.
This is Ripley, last survivor of the Nostromo, signing off.
prince
Passion (Greverade) Altarpiece (left wing), 1491, Hans Memling
Medium: oil,wood
Automat. New York City, Photo © Elliott Erwitt, 1953
Fresco with two men buying bread, found in the house of a baker, Pompeii.
Portrait of Charles the Bold, 1460, Rogier Van Der Weyden
Medium: oil,panel
https://www.wikiart.org/en/rogier-van-der-weyden/portrait-of-charles-the-bold-1
Me and my synthi 1972 with sister card from papz
Some envelope play