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Duamutef or Anubis Canopic Jar, Ceramic

Duamutef canopic jar is 10 inches tall and 7 inches in diameter. The jar lid is the head of a black jackal representing the Egyptian god Duamutef. Yes, Duamutef looks like Anubis, but he's a different god with different jobs. In ancient funerary practice Duamutef protected the jar containing the stomach of the deceased. Of course, if you plan to use the jar for other puposes then the jackal head could represent Anubis. The context of the symbol establishes its meaning at least as much as the symbol itself.

The body of the jar is decorated with a label of Hathor and a procession of other Egyptian gods.

Duamutef is one of the four sons of Horus, who help the spirits of the dead on their journey to the afterlife. We also have sets of canopic jars made of cold-cast resin showing all four sons of Horus.

In ancient Egyptian funerary practice, the internal organs had to be removed from the body during mummification to allow complete drying. The heart was placed back in the body, but the other removed organs were wrapped in linen and stored in stone or ceramic jars. When the practice developed during the Old Kingdom, the jars were unornamented. By the end of the First Intermediate Period jars were often decorated with a human head representing the deceased. Early Egyptologists called these jars "Canopic" because of their similarity to other jars decorated with human heads: either the jars dedicated to Osiris in the town of Canopus near Alexandria, or perhaps offering jars for the cult of Canopus, a Greek water deity. During the New Kingdom the practice developed of carving representations of the Sons of Horus on the Canopic jars.

Stuffe & Nonsense Egyptian figurines and collectibles are modern manufactured decorative objects, made in the style of ancient Egyptian artifacts.