Ingeniøren og de ægyptiske mumier: En kioskbasker fra 1910’erne

T. Christiansen
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Abstract

Thomas Christiansen: The Engineer and the Egyptian Mummies: A Scoop from the 1910s The article contains a wealth of new and valuable information on important ancient Egyptian objects that are today housed and on display in the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen and the Museum of Ancient Art (Antikmuseet) in Aarhus. Using Mediestream – a service provided by the Royal Library that allows you to access and search more than 35 million digitised Danish newspaper pages – it tells the curious story of a Danish engineer, Jacob Kjeldsen (1873‑1914), and three ancient Egyptian mummiesand coffins from the 21st Dynasty (c. 1070‑950 BCE). From the study of these newspapers it emerges that, during a trip to Egypt in 1910, Kjeldsen had acquired three mummies and coffins in Luxor from Mohammed Abd er-Rasul – a son of the infamous antiquities dealer Mohammed Ahmed Abd er-Rasul – who had discovered them in a tomb in Deir el-Bahari. Shortly after Kjeldsen’s return to Copenhagen, descriptions of the objects began to circulate in the press, and ValdemarSchmidt (1836‑1925), the first Danish Egyptologist, acquired the coffin and mummy of a priest of Amun by the name of Khonshotep for the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (inv. ÆIN 1069). During the autumn of the same year, Kjeldsen tried to sell his two remaining mummies, both female priestesses of Amun, and their coffins to the Museum of Aarhus (Aarhus Museum), but without success. Instead, they were impounded and auctioned off by the town magistrate in 1912, because Kjeldsen owed money to a patent office inCopenhagen. This is the last reference to the two mummies in the newspapers, until one of them cropped up out of the blue in Aarhus. In 1950 the newspapers reported that an industrialist, Ivan Lystager (1904‑1985), had donated an Egyptian mummy and coffin to the newly founded Museum of Ancient Art in Aarhus. The name, Taubasti, and titles, ‘Lady of the House’ and ‘Chantress of Amun’, inscribed on the coffin (inv. O 303) leave no room for doubt that it and the accompanying mummy once belonged to Kjeldsen. A letter in the archives of the museum informs us that Lystager had bought them in an antiquities shop in Copenhagen in 1939. The fate of Kjeldsen’s last mummy and coffin and their current whereabouts are still unknown. From the newspapers it can be deduced that the coffin stems from the same period (the 21st Dynasty) and was made for a woman, who also bore the titles ‘Lady of the House’ and ‘Chantress of Amun’, and probably answered to the name of Tamit. Because of onomastics and the fact that the three coffins all derive from the same period and were made for members of clergy of Amun in Thebes, it is likely that Mohammed Abd er-Rasul found the three mummies interred together in an unknown family tomb in Deir el-Bahari in 1910. The article is therefore supplemented with an appendix, which provides a catalogue of the names and titles inscribed in hieroglyphs on the two coffins in the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek and the Museum of Ancient Art. Hopefully, it can assist researchers in the search for the now lost coffin and mummy (and potentially other grave goods from the same tomb) in state and private ancient Egyptian collections around the world.
托马斯·克里斯蒂安森:工程师和埃及木乃伊:从20世纪10年代的独家报道这篇文章包含了丰富的新的和有价值的信息,关于重要的古埃及物品,今天被安置和展示在哥本哈根的新嘉士伯雕刻博物馆和奥胡斯的古代艺术博物馆(Antikmuseet)。使用Mediestream——一项由皇家图书馆提供的服务,可以让你访问和搜索超过3500万份数字化的丹麦报纸页面——它讲述了丹麦工程师雅各布·凯尔森(Jacob Kjeldsen, 1873 - 1914)和三具21王朝(公元前1070 - 950年)的古埃及木乃伊和棺材的奇妙故事。从对这些报纸的研究中可以看出,在1910年的一次埃及之旅中,凯尔森从臭名昭著的古董商穆罕默德·艾哈迈德·阿卜杜勒·拉苏尔的儿子穆罕默德·阿卜杜勒·拉苏尔那里获得了卢克索的三具木乃伊和棺材,他在代尔巴哈里的一个坟墓里发现了这些木乃伊和棺材。Kjeldsen回到哥本哈根后不久,关于这些物品的描述开始在媒体上流传,ValdemarSchmidt(1836 - 1925),第一位丹麦埃及古物学家,为Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (inv. ÆIN 1069)获得了一位名叫Khonshotep的阿蒙牧师的棺材和木乃伊。同年秋天,凯尔森试图把他剩下的两具木乃伊(都是阿蒙女祭司)和她们的棺材卖给奥胡斯博物馆(奥胡斯博物馆),但没有成功。然而,1912年,由于凯尔德森欠哥本哈根专利局的钱,它们被镇政府扣押并拍卖了。这是报纸上最后一次提到这两具木乃伊,直到其中一具突然出现在奥胡斯。1950年,报纸报道实业家Ivan Lystager(1904 - 1985)向奥胡斯新成立的古代艺术博物馆捐赠了一具埃及木乃伊和棺材。棺材上的名字,Taubasti和头衔,“房子的夫人”和“阿蒙的女祭司”(inv. O 303)让人毫无疑问,它和随行的木乃伊曾经属于凯尔森。博物馆档案中的一封信告诉我们,利斯塔格是1939年在哥本哈根的一家古董店买的。凯尔森最后的木乃伊和棺材的命运以及他们目前的下落仍然未知。从报纸上可以推断出,这个棺材来自同一时期(21王朝),是为一位女性制作的,她也有“房子的夫人”和“阿蒙的女祭司”的头衔,可能是塔米特的名字。由于这三具棺材都来自同一时期,是为底比斯的阿蒙教神职人员制作的,因此很可能是1910年穆罕默德·阿卜杜勒·拉苏尔在代尔巴哈里的一个不知名的家族墓穴中发现了这三具木乃伊。因此,这篇文章附有一个附录,其中提供了在新嘉士伯雕刻博物馆和古代艺术博物馆的两具棺材上以象形文字铭刻的姓名和头衔的目录。希望它能帮助研究人员在世界各地的国家和私人古埃及收藏中寻找现在丢失的棺材和木乃伊(以及可能来自同一坟墓的其他墓葬)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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