Circa 1400 BC to 1300 BC
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Dimensions 24.4″ (62.0cm) high
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Medium Terracotta
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Origin Sinai
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Throughout the Bronze
Age, Egyptian culture strongly influenced the peoples of ancient Palestine,
including the Philistines. Among the many customs borrowed from Egypt was the
tradition of burying deceased individuals of high rank in coffins modeled after
the human form. Most probably, those interred in this fashion were Philistine
aristocrats who emulated Egyptian ways, though it is possible that they might
have been provincial officials of the Egyptian kingdom. This rare and
magnificent terracotta mask, a fragment of a full-sized casket, depicts the
face of man who stares back at us from beyond the grave. Although his features
reveal the influence of Egyptian mummy cases, the high headdress suggests that
this coffin is of Philistine origin. The modeling and painting are lively and
quick, a local variation of the more refined Egyptian style. This bold
expressionism gives the fragment a vital presence. Though the portrait is
hardly an accurate one, it conveys the energy of a real human life, an energy
still felt thousand of years later.
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