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SAM'S collection
Headrest
Headrest

Headrest

Date2680 B.C. - 2420 B.C.
Label TextAncient Egyptians often slept with their heads on wooden headrests, while stone examples were placed under the head of a mummy as it lay in a coffin. Such pillows offered protection to "he who went to sleep" (the deceased) by keeping malevolent spirits at bay. Headrests changed little throughout the three millennia of Egyptian civilization and are similar to those still being carved in parts of East and West Africa today.
Object number52.46
Provenance(Possibly from Sakkarah, vicinity of Temple of the Step Pyramid); [M.A. Mansoor & Sons, Cairo / New York / Heliopolis]; purchased from gallery by Seattle Art Museum / Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection, Seattle, Washington, December 4, 1951, in exchange for two objects returned in January, 1950; Accessioned by Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, January 21, 1952
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions9 x 8 x 3 5/8 in. (22.8 x 20.3 x 9.2 cm)
MediumAlabaster
Vase
Egyptian
Object number: 44.32
Cosmetic jar
Egyptian
ca. 1550 - 1295 B.C.
Object number: 64.78
Egyptian
Object number: 81.17.1519
Vessel: Hydria
Egyptian
Object number: 52.116
Kohl Jar
Egyptian
ca. 3000 B.C.
Object number: 33.175
Egyptian
ca. 1991-1885 B.C.
Object number: 91.77
Amphora
Egyptian
Object number: 47.10
Amphora
Egyptian
Object number: 47.11
Sumerian
4th-3rd millennium B.C.
Object number: 41.101
Babylonian
ca. 2000 B.C.
Object number: 41.99
Funerary Relief
1st century B.C.
Object number: 63.42
Table: Kiss of Judas
Object number: 67.35