A copper alloy votive statue of Osiris, mummiform and standing. It is a solid figure on a stand with hieroglyphs on the front indicating that the statue was commissioned by Ankhkhonsu. The figure is partially inlaid (eyes and beard straps) and coated in black. The tail of the uraeus stretches up toward the top of the atef-crown worn by the god, although the feathers on each side of the crown are now missing. Statues such as these were set up in temples as votive offerings. The object is composed of three main parts: the statue, the base, and the filling within the base holding the statue in place. XRF analysis of the filling indicates that it is 90% zinc based and thus likely added in more recent times to attach the statue to the base. Purchased by Sir Henry Wellcome at auction in 1906 from the collection of Robert de Rustafjaell. Possibly dating to the Twenty-fifth or Twenty-sixth Dynasty.
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