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- Q19903311 subject Q7146913.
- Q19903311 subject Q7464676.
- Q19903311 subject Q8316510.
- Q19903311 abstract "The anthropoid ceramic coffins of the Late Bronze Age Levant are a unique burial practice that is a synthesis of Egyptian and Near Eastern ideologies. The coffins date from the 14th to 10th centuries BCE and have been found at Deir el-Balah, Beth Shean, Lachish, Tell el-Far’ah, Sahab, and most recently in the Jezreel Valley in 2013. The coffins show Egyptian influence in the Ancient Near East and exhibit many Egyptian qualities in the depictions on the face masks on the lids. The lids can be separated into to artistic categories, the natural and grotesque, and the bodies are separated into type A, tapered from the shoulders, and type B, cylindrical. The graves contain wealthy funerary offerings from a variety of origins from Cyprus, Mycenae, Egypt, Phoenicia, and Canaan. The graves appear to be originally reserved for Egyptian officials and then later became a part of Canaanite and Philistine culture.".
- Q19903311 thumbnail Anthropoid_Clay_Coffin1.jpg?width=300.
- Q19903311 wikiPageExternalLink clay_coffin.aspx.
- Q19903311 wikiPageExternalLink Anthropoid_Coffin_of_Thothirdes.
- Q19903311 wikiPageExternalLink fs_coffins.pdf.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q1020853.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q1061510.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q10857409.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q1121819.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q1160695.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q11642.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q11761.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q132564.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q13955.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q1523.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q152368.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q161439.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q163329.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q16901414.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q180568.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q186946.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q193776.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q203859.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q218248.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q224104.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q229.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q2372919.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q23792.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q2655498.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q292849.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q34023.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q34049.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q34095.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q35355.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q41642.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q451799.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q48214.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q5540743.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q557383.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q5699.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q7146913.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q7464676.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q763829.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q7860.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q79.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q81483.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q8316510.
- Q19903311 wikiPageWikiLink Q848509.
- Q19903311 comment "The anthropoid ceramic coffins of the Late Bronze Age Levant are a unique burial practice that is a synthesis of Egyptian and Near Eastern ideologies. The coffins date from the 14th to 10th centuries BCE and have been found at Deir el-Balah, Beth Shean, Lachish, Tell el-Far’ah, Sahab, and most recently in the Jezreel Valley in 2013. The coffins show Egyptian influence in the Ancient Near East and exhibit many Egyptian qualities in the depictions on the face masks on the lids.".
- Q19903311 label "Anthropoid ceramic coffins".
- Q19903311 depiction Anthropoid_Clay_Coffin1.jpg.