Cosmetic Box with a Swivel Top (1550 BC) – Egypt [3899×2942]

    by protocodex

    2 Comments

    1. Found on [Artifact Guesser](https://artifactguesser.com), an Open Artifact Database with a Time/Location Guessing Game build on top for fun and discovery.

      Description:

      This small ivory box has a lid that is pegged at one end, allowing it to swivel open and closed. The hole at the other end of the lid once held another peg. When closed, the peg in the lid and the peg protruding from the box could be bound together with string to keep the box from opening. The top of the box has been decorated with incised lines that form a rosette framed by a zig-zag pattern. The rosette was probably made using an early type of compass. The decoration was once filled with a material called Egyptian blue. Boxes similar to this one, made of [wood](https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/548967), bone, or ivory, probably held dry cosmetics such as rouge.

      The box was excavated by the Museum’s Egyptian Expedition in 1916. It had been placed near the head of a coffin along with a number of other jars that came to the Museum when the finds were divided with the Egyptian Antiquities Service. These include three jars of Egyptian alabaster (16.10.421, 16.10.423–.424), one small ointment jar of serpentine (16.10.422), two pottery vessels (16.10.427–.428), and three ivory combs (16.10.428–.430).

      More info, images, a map of that time period, and similar artifacts [here](https://artifactguesser.com/artifacts/664c02b1b1ae9d19c9bcad31).

      Visit the [Original MET Source](https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/547031) to see whether its on display, for their history timeline and further essays/resouces on this type of object.

    2. YellowOnline on

      It’s fascinating that this design could just as well be in use 3500 years later.

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