A crouching bearded man resting his left arm on a red sword
- watercolour
- mounted
- [on mount, bottom edge] 'Nasr i Deen formerly Melek of Berber'. (ink note)
- 18.8 by 21.4 cm
A crouching bearded man resting his left arm on a red sword
A seated man with a sword:
Image inspired by a relief scene from side room I of the tomb of Ramesses III (KV11, Valley of the Kings) on the west bank of Thebes. The scene includes two harpist figures dressed in white robes, and damage to the original scene is noted by the omission of one figures' face and a lower part of the left side harp:
Six detailed ceiling patterns from unidentified tombs on the west bank of Thebes:
The flowering plant Solanum:
An identified plant, possibly Hibiscus Esculentus:
A group of pink, yellow and purple flowers (unidentified):
Relief scene from the early 18th Dynasty tomb of Neferhotep (TT50) at the west bank of Thebes. This scene comes from register I, and shows May making offerings before the king Horemheb, with several male figures behind wearing garlands:
Relief scene from the passageway of the early 18th Dynasty tomb of Neferhotep (TT50) at the west bank of Thebes. This scene shows the seated tomb-owner and his wife on the left, with a smaller figure of their daughter beside them, with a table of offerings placed before them on the right side:
Relief scene from the passageway of the early 18th Dynasty tomb of Neferhotep (TT50) at the west bank of Thebes. This scene shows part of three registers, the majority of these containing text on festival processions and rituals. The text is interspersed with images of the seated tomb-owner and his wife, the divine barque and other funerary ritual scenes:
Drawing of two stelae. On the left side is the early 18th Dynasty stela of a man named Anen, likely from Thebes, showing Anen offering flowers to the seated god Amun-Re. On the right side the stela is from the 17th Dynasty of prince Ahmose, of unknown provenance, showing Ahmose seated with his pet dog in receipt of offerings. Along the bottom edge of the paper is another separate sketch of a bracelet consisting of various scarabs with inscribed bases:
Colossi of Memnon, located at the site of the temple of Amenhotep III at Kom el-Hetan on the west bank at Thebes:
Colossi of Memnon, located at the site of the temple of Amenhotep III at Kom el-Hetan on the west bank at Thebes:
View of the courtyard area of the temple of Amun and Amenhotep III at Soleb:
View of the Gate of Diocletian at Philae:
Drawing of a seated man and his wife behind him from an unidentified tomb in Thebes. A faint border for hieroglyphs is visible along the top edge, and a small star shape is visible on the top left corner:
View of Cairo, including the madrasa of Sultan Hasan and the mosque of Amir Akhor:
Study of two young boys, one with his hand on the shoulder of the other boy and facing towards him:
Study of a male figure seated and with a pipe:
(1) Excavation journals for 1899-1901 (working with W. M. F. Petrie) and 1901-1903 (working with G. A. Reisner).
(2) Personal correspondence exchanged between Mace and his wife Winifred during the Winter season 1922-1923, Winifred Mace and her mother during the Winter season 1923-1924, and other correspondence related to the excavation of the tomb of Tutankhamun.
(3) Two typewritten articles by Mace on work in Tutankhamun's tomb: "DESPATCH No. 5" (3 pages), and "THE CLOSING OF THE TOMB" (incomplete, first page only + newspaper cutting of The Times article); both submitted to The Times and subsequently published on 31/01/1923 and 28/03/1923.
(4) 39 photographs, most are original Burton images, some of which have been annotated by Howard Carter; they may have been used during the preparation of H. Carter and A. C. Mace, The Tomb of Tut.ankh.Amen i (1923).
(5) Newspaper cuttings, most from The Times, published between 1922 and 1925.
(y) Mace's account of the opening of the burial chamber of Tutankhamun - typewritten version (TAA iv.1). Diary for 1922-3 (TAA iv.2).
(z) Mace's account of the opening of the burial chamber of Tutankhamun - original handwritten version (TAA iv.3).
Index of Late Egyptian Grammar, index for Egyptian Dictionary, and various other indexes. 18 notebooks containing copies of hieratic papyri and ostraca. Small watercolour. 2 boxes of family papers and ephemera, including personal correspondence, certificates, photographs, notes for Peet’s books on Neolithic Italy, a couple of pages from an inaugural lecture, newspaper cuttings, a travel record small notebook, a Latin and Greek classes notebook, a diary, etc.
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