A couple in Cornwall contacted the UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology regarding a broken pot in their garage, after seeing a
television documentary.
Watching The Man Who
Discovered Egypt, about pioneering archaeologist Flinders Petrie, they were
reminded of a small black-topped vessel, around 15cm high and complete with a
yellowing label, which had been forgotten about for years.
Curator Alice Stevenson was then able to match the number 1754,
visible on the base of the pot and the label, to grave records from Petrie’s
excavations in Naqada during the 1890s, now held in the museum’s archives.
The pot had previously belonged to the finder’s grandfather,
a taxi driver in the High Wickham area in the 1950s, and is believed to have
been offered as payment by a mystery passenger, in place of the standard fare.
Petrie Curator Alice Stevenson said:
“We don’t know what
the pot was originally used for but it may have had a different function in
daily life, such as holding a liquid like beer, before being re-used as a tomb
offering.
“Petrie’s discoveries
were widely distributed to museums across Europe and the US but some items
found their way into private hands. The fact that effort was put into printing and designing a
label suggests that this was not a one off, so it’s possible that many other
artefacts from prehistoric Egypt might be unknowingly concealed in garages, cupboards
and attics.
“The pot is particularly significant as it marks the
discovery of a new era in Egyptology – not really known about at the time of
excavation. The unusual nature of such
pots such as this one, led Petrie to be the first to define the Predynastic
Egyptian era, the period before the pharaohs.”
The pot is now being conserved by the museum and
will go on display with other objects from the same grave as part of the
Festival of Pots, an exhibition and public events programme celebrating the 25
years of the Friends of the Petrie Museum, 20 May-14 June.
Photo: The Petrie Museum
Press Release
Photo: The Petrie Museum
Press Release
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