Shabti of Hor

Third Intermediate Period

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 130

One of a group of eight funerary figures (shabtis) found in the debris of one of the ramps leading up to the Hatshepsut Temple at Deir el-Bahri. These are inscribed for a man named Hor, or Horus, who was likely part of an important family buried in the temple precinct.

Shabtis were avatars of their owners, meant to do manual work on their behalf in the afterlife. Hor would originally have had over 400 shabtis, one worker for each day of the year and one supervisor for each ten-day week.

Shabti of Hor, Faience

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