
Marc Loth
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Papers by Marc Loth
oder Fassaden mit Hieroglyphen, ägyptisierenden Bildern oder Ansichten Ägyptens dekorierte.
Viel ist davon verloren gegangen, teils durch Kriegseinwirkungen, aber auch durch die rasante Bautätigkeit in der Großstadt. Manches ist jedoch bis heute erhalten geblieben und wird vom Betrachter oft gar nicht als
altägyptisch wahrgenommen.
„Pharaonen an der Spree“ bietet erstmalig eine Einführung in das Thema und stellt in zwölf faktenreichen Artikeln herausragende Werke in Text und Bild vor, so z.B. das Berliner Schloss und das Neue Museum.
An Berlin und am alten Ägypten Interessierte werden auf eine bisher meist übersehene Exotik in Deutschlands Hauptstadt aufmerksam gemacht, und die Berliner werden vielleicht zu der Erkenntnis kommen, dass ihre Stadt, nicht nur die Titel Spree-Athen oder Sünden-Babel beanspruchen kann, sondern auch den eines Theben an der Spree.
Almost every canton of Switzerland has at least one museum owning Egyptian artefacts. There are over 30’000 objects housed in more than forty museums throughout the entire country. Although many collections include coffins, the majority of these items is largely unknown. That is why the Swiss Coffin Project was initiated in 2004 as an independent, privately funded research project with the objective of making Egyptian burial equipment in Swiss museums accessible to a wider public as well as to specialists.
In 2007, the volume «Unter dem Schutz der Himmelsgöttin» was published, presenting a selection of coffins (with their mummies) and mummy masks from sixteen Swiss public collections. The research work was continued in the following years; meanwhile, thirty museums are involved in the project, so that an expanded and updated edition of the above-mentioned volume is planned. In addition to intact coffins and mummy masks, this new edition will also feature coffin fragments as well as mummy coverings (bead-nets/cartonnages/shrouds) and portraits. The studied material dates from the Middle Kingdom to the Roman Period.
The publication, scheduled to appear in 2024, is conceived as a scientific cross-media publication combining print and online resources. While the objects will be presented in a concise version in print, each item will be provided with a QR-code that allows access to its entire documentation. A special focus will be placed on the provenances and the acquisition histories.
The talk will give a summary of the Swiss Coffin Project addressing its objectives and approach as well as the current state of research. It will also present the preliminary results of the studies on some little-known and particularly interesting pieces.
Berlin 01. September 2015
Berlin 27. Mai 2006
As far as the authors know, these are the earliest Egyptian mummies to have come to Europe that are still preserved with their original wrappings. In 1615, they were excavated by the Italian explorer Pietro della Valle in Saqqara. In 1728, they became part of the collection of the Elector of Saxony and King of Poland August II (byname the Strong). Nowadays, they are kept in the Skulpturensammlung of Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden in Germany.
In 2016, a computed tomography (CT) analysis was conducted for the first time in order to determine the age at death and sex, to identify possible pathologies as well as to estimate the state of preservation, mummification, and wrapping technique.
CT analysis revealed a male between 25 and 30 years and a female between 30 and 40 years. Pathological findings include, amongst others, a congenital dental anomaly of the male and evidence of osteoarthritis in the left knee joint of the female. Both mummies show well-preserved skulls and lower limbs. The skeletal elements of the torso and the arms were disarticulated and displaced during post mortem manipulations. Remnants of the brain and the inner organs are not preserved. Hyperdense fragments inside the torso of the male seem to be a conglomerate of bones, sediments and maybe filling material. Numerous perforated circular objects about 1 cm in size inside the female’s torso could be beads of a necklace. A specification of several dense metal foreign objects in both mummies has not been possible so far. Further on, wooden boards were observed on which the bodies had been placed before the wrapping was conducted.
The CT investigation revealed detailed knowledge about the health of the deceased during life and about their state of preservation and mummification, even though not all questions are able to be entirely answered so far. The mummies are rare examples of the final phase of the mummy tradition in Egypt. They are also exceptional because their discovery site and the circumstances of discovery are documented, even though the mummies were excavated in the very early days of archaeology and mummy trade in Egypt.