British Museum Department of Ancient Egypt and Sudan
The Department of Ancient Egypt and Sudan is a department forming an historic part of the British Museum, housing the world's largest and most comprehensive collection of Egyptian antiquities outside the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
History
have formed part of the British Museum collection ever since its foundation in 1753 after receiving 160 Egyptian objects from Sir Hans Sloane. After the defeat of the French forces under Napoleon at the Battle of the Nile in 1801, the Egyptian antiquities collected were confiscated by the British army and presented to the British Museum in 1803. These works, which included the famed Rosetta Stone, were the first important group of large sculptures to be acquired by the Museum. Thereafter, the UK appointed Henry Salt as consul in Egypt who amassed a huge collection of antiquities, some of which were assembled and transported with great ingenuity by the famous Italian explorer Giovanni Belzoni. Most of the antiquities Salt collected were purchased by the British Museum and the Musée du Louvre.By 1866 the collection consisted of some 10,000 objects. Antiquities from excavations started to come to the museum in the latter part of the 19th century as a result of the work of the Egypt Exploration Fund under the efforts of E.A. Wallis Budge. Over the years more than 11,000 objects came from this source, including pieces from Amarna, Bubastis and Deir el-Bahari. Other organisations and individuals also excavated and donated objects to the British Museum, including Flinders Petrie's Egypt Research Account and the British School of Archaeology in Egypt, as well as the Oxford University Expedition to Kawa and Faras in Sudan.
Active support by the museum for excavations in Egypt continued to result in important acquisitions throughout the 20th century until changes in antiquities laws in Egypt led to the suspension of policies allowing finds to be exported, although divisions still continue in Sudan. The British Museum conducted its own excavations in Egypt where it received divisions of finds, including Asyut, Mostagedda and Matmar, Ashmunein and sites in Sudan such as Soba, Kawa and the Northern Dongola Reach. The size of the Egyptian collections now stand at over 110,000 objects.
In autumn 2001 the eight million objects forming the Museum's permanent collection were further expanded by the addition of six million objects from the Wendorf Collection of Egyptian and Sudanese Prehistory. These were donated by Professor Fred Wendorf of Southern Methodist University in Texas, and comprise the entire collection of artefacts and environmental remains from his excavations at Prehistoric sites in the Sahara Desert between 1963 and 1997. Other fieldwork collections have recently come from Dietrich and Rosemarie Klemm and William Adams.
The seven permanent Egyptian galleries at the British Museum, which include its largest exhibition space, can display only 4% of its Egyptian holdings. The second-floor galleries have a selection of the museum's collection of 140 mummies and coffins, the largest outside Cairo. A high proportion of the collection comes from tombs or contexts associated with the cult of the dead, and it is these pieces, in particular the mummies, that remain among the most eagerly sought after exhibits by visitors to the museum.
Collections
Key highlights of the collections include the following:Predynastic and Early Dynastic period
- Mummy of Ginger from Gebelein
- Flint knife with an ivory handle, Sheikh Hamada, Egypt
- The Battlefield Palette and Hunters Palette, two cosmetic palettes with complex decorative schemes
- Ivory statuette of a king, from the early temple at Abydos, Egypt
- King Den's sandal label from Abydos, mid-1st Dynasty
- Stela of King Peribsen, Abydos
- Artefacts from the tomb of King Khasekhemwy from the 2nd Dynasty
- Granite statue of Ankhwa, the shipbuilder, Saqqara, Egypt, 3rd Dynasty
- Several of the original casing stones from the Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
- Statue of Nenkheftka from Deshasha, 4th Dynasty
- Limestone false door of Ptahshepses
- Wooden tomb statue of Tjeti, 5th to 6th Dynasty
- Inner and outer coffin of Sebekhetepi, Beni Hasan
- Limestone stela of Heqaib, Abydos, Egypt, 12th Dynasty
- Quartzite statue of Ankhrekhu, 12th Dynasty
- Granite statue of Senwosret III
- Block statue and stela of Sahathor, 12th Dynasty, reign of Amenemhat II
- Limestone statue and stelae from the offering chapel of Inyotef, Abydos, 12th Dynasty
- Schist head of Pharaoh Hatshepsut or her successor Tuthmosis III
- Fragment of the beard of the Great Sphinx of Giza
- Colossal head from a statue of Amenhotep III
- Colossal limestone bust of Amenhotep III
- Amarna Tablets, 99 out of 382 tablets found, second greatest collection in the world after the Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin
- List of the kings of Egypt from the Temple of Ramesses II
- Statue of the Nile god Hapy, Karnak
- Mummy case and coffin of Nesperennub, Thebes
- Shabaka Stone from Memphis, Egypt, 25th Dynasty
- Statue of Amun in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa
- Inner and outer coffins of the priest Hor, Deir el-Bahari, Thebes, 25th Dynasty
- Granite statue of the Sphinx of Taharqo
- Saite Sarcophagus of Satsobek, the vizier of the northern part of Egypt in the reign of Psammetichus I
- Bronze figure of Isis and Horus, North Saqqara, Egypt
- Sarcophagus of Hapmen, Cairo, 26th Dynasty or later
- Kneeling statue of Wahibre, from near Lake Mariout
- Sarcophagus of Ankhnesneferibre
- Obelisks and sarcophagus of Pharaoh Nectanebo II
- The famous Rosetta Stone, trilingual stela that unlocked the ancient Egyptian civilisation
- Giant sculpture of a scarab beetle
- Fragment of a basalt Egyptian-style statue of Ptolemy
- Mummy of Hornedjitef, Thebes
- Wall from a chapel of Queen Shanakdakhete, Meroë
- Naos of Ptolemy VII, Philae
- Schist head of a young man, Alexandria
- The Meriotic Hamadab Stela from the Kingdom of Kush found near the ancient site of Meroë in Sudan, 24 BC
- Lid of the coffin of Soter and Cleopatra from Qurna, Thebes
- Mummy of a youth with a portrait of the deceased, Hawara
- Bronze lamp and patera from the X-group tombs, Qasr Ibrim
- Coptic wall painting of the martyrdom of saints, Wadi Sarga
Gallery