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Egyptian Shabti Figurines

Note tripartite wigs, folded arms mummiform appearance and inscription glorifying Osiris
Some Egyptian figurines from the Library collection in their new housing. Note tripartite wigs, folded arms, mummiform appearance and inscription glorifying Osiris.

We are all becoming increasingly aware of the development of the ‘sharing economy’, a socio-economic phenomenon in which individuals provide services for others; whether it is through the sharing of private vehicles, sharing one’s home, supper clubs or providing personal laundry, cleaning and dog walking services. However, this concept of service has a long and ancient history. The ancient Egyptians believed that committed and loyal service continued into the afterlife. Although death played a very important role in Egyptian society, it was not considered a terminal state but rather just another stage in the cycle of life, leading to another type of existence in the afterlife. As in life, so in death, assistance was needed to undertake manual labour and thus developed the tradition of burying funerary figurines called shabti to support the deceased. The Manuscripts & Archives Research Library has a number of these which were recently re-housed.

Note basket on back TCD NS OBJ/ND/7 back)
Note basket on back. (TCD MS OBJ/ND/8 back).
TCD MS OBJ_ND_8_recto
Note hoes drawn in each hand. (TCD MS OBJ/ND/8 front).

The afterlife was considered to be an extension of earthly existence; a person’s body was preserved through mummification and acted as a vessel for the spiritual facets of an individual. It was believed in the afterlife that the same needs and comforts as those in life were required such as sustenance and nourishment. In early periods, foodstuffs were placed in the grave. This practice developed into using magic and ritual to replenish food and provide sustenance. During the 1st Dynasty, the King was accompanied in death by his attendants, so that he was not deprived of their service in the afterlife. This practice evolved into physical representations of servants, who could act as substitutes for real ones. These were manifested in graves as small statutes of servants engaged in tasks such as baking bread and brewing beer.

In the Middle Kingdom (2040-1782 BC) these servant figures were superseded by funerary figurines which we call shabti (also shawabti and ushebti). At the height of their popularity, kings, as well as their subjects, required shabti for their tombs. Their importance in funerary rituals is reflected in their continued use for over two thousand years.

The significance of shabti is complex and through time their roles changed. Initially, they represented a personal substitute for their master and a reserve body that could receive nourishment in the afterlife. However, this role developed so that shabti were considered to take their owner’s place in carrying out manual labour in the afterlife. Egyptian civilisation was based around agriculture and even in the afterlife one could not escape from the statutory labour that was employed to keep the agricultural system functioning. During the New Kingdom (1570-1070 BC) and later, shabti were equipped for their work with hoes, picks, seed or grain baskets, carrying-yokes, water pots and brick moulds. These were carved or painted onto the figurines. Eventually, shabti came to be regarded as slaves of their owner, with a strict hierarchy imposed.

Most of the shabti in circulation today are from the Third Intermediate (1069-525 BC) and Late Periods (664-332 BC), when they were mass-produced in large numbers by craftsmen running workshops attached to the temples.

Wooden shabti. Note extensive version of Shabti spell (TCD NS OBJ/ND/7 front)
Wooden shabti. Note extensive version of Shabti spell (TCD MS OBJ/ND/7 front)
Note baskets on back (TCD NS OBJ/ND/7 back)
Note baskets on back (TCD MS OBJ/ND/7 back)

The shabti figurines in the Library display the traditional iconography. The figurines have tripartite wigs, their arms are folded across their chest and they are usually mummiform in shape, an idealised representation of the deceased. Agricultural implements are either modelled or painted onto their bodies. They range in size from a small 5 cm example, crudely manufactured in faience (a glazed ceramic), to a carefully carved wooden example which is over 25 cm tall. Shabtis were made from a variety of materials including; wood, stone, wax, metal, glass, faience, pottery and ivory.

The functioning of shabtis was dependant on a magical incantation, the ‘Shabti spell’, from chapter six of the Book of the Dead: ‘O Shabti, allotted to me, if I be summoned or if I be detailed to do any work which has be be done in the realm of the dead … “here I am” you shall say’. This is inscribed onto the figurine with a pointed tool prior to it being fired. However, many smaller shabtis bear only the name and title of the owner, often preceded by the introductory formula sehedj Wsir ‘glorifying the Osiris’. The god, Osiris is a central figure associated with death and resurrection.

In the Middle Kingdom only one or two shabtis were provided for each burial and were a mark of high status. They were often provided with miniature coffins and were considered to serve as an image of the deceased. In the New Kingdom, the iconography of agricultural tools developed, and the shabti’s role as a servant was developed. At the beginning of the 19th dynasty (1293-1185 BC) the number of shabtis provided for each burial increased; this coincided with a reduction in the size of the figures and a simplification of manufacturing processes leading to mass production in moulds. Shabtis came to be considered as slaves to do their owners bidding and a canonical organisation was established. A full complement of figurines comprised of 365 workers, one for each day of the year, which were organised in thirty-six gangs of ten, each supervised by an overseer, who was fashioned holding a whip. They were stored heaped inside shrine-shaped boxes or pottery jars. Sometimes they stood in ranks around the tomb chamber.

The shabti figurines in the Manuscripts & Archives department have been re-housed in custom-made archival quality boxes. Each figurine has a carefully padded individual compartment within each box, which are designed to minimise direct handling by researchers, while still allowing visual inspection.

Several thousand years have passed since they were first interred with their owners, and one can only speculate what tasks these Dublin-based shabtis had been ordered to carry out by their original owner. Perhaps, so far from their Egyptian home, these servants continue to carry out their master’s bidding to seek sustenance and comfort in the afterlife.

 

Andrew Megaw, Senior Conservator of Books and Manuscripts

 

References

Janes, G. (2012) The Shabti Collections 5 A Selection from The Manchester Museum. Lymm Cheshire : Olicar House Publications.

Stewart, H.M. (1995) Egyptian Shabtis. Princes Risborough : Shire Publications Ltd.

Taylor, J. (2001) Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt. London : British Museum Press.

 

 

 

Love, treason and revenge at the medieval French Court

These subjects form the plot of the novel Freida the Jongleur (London, 1857), a manuscript draft copy of which is held in the Manuscripts & Archives Research Library.

Ms 10870, folio 191
TCD MS 10870, folio 191

The story takes place in France during the reign of Philippe IV le Bel (1285-1314) and of his sons Louis and Philip. Freida, a pagan jongleur (an itinerant minstrel), travels from Acre in Palestine to France. She witnesses court life and the torments of the end of a glorious era. She is confronted with love, treason, Christianity, and the quest for revenge, following the execution of her son Eldrid. I dare say that, from an historical point of view, the author took some liberty, even if the principal events are well known. Written in a romantic and sentimental style, this historical novel fits well into one trend of nineteenth-century literature.

The author of this novel was an Anglo-Irish woman named Barbara Hemphill (d. 1858). Her father, Patrick Hare, was the rector of Golden, co. Tipperary. In 1807, she married John Hemphill and had five children. One of her sons, the lawyer and politician Charles, became the first Baron Hemphill in 1906. Barbara

TCD MS 10870, folio 262(i)
TCD MS 10870, folio 262(i)

Hemphill had already been writing for quite a while when she was encouraged to publish her work by a family connection, antiquarian Thomas Crofton Croker. Her first story appeared in the Dublin University Magazine in 1838 with the title of ‘The Royal Confession, A Monastic Legend’. Then came her first novel, Lionel Deerhurst; or, Fashionable Life under the Regency (London, 1846). It was published anonymously, although the Countess of Blessington, another well-known author, was identified as the editor. Success arrived with her second novel, The Priest’s Niece; or, the heirship of Barnulph (London, 1855), which quickly went to a second edition. This success encouraged Hemphill to identify herself as the author of Freida the Jongleur (London, 1857).

TCD MS 10870, folio 477
TCD MS 10870, folio 477

The Papers of Barbara Hemphill (TCD MS 10869-72) were purchased at auction by M&ARL in 1995. In addition to the manuscript of Freida the Jongleur, the collection also contains a manuscript draft copy of The Priest’s Niece, as well as fair copies of two additional (unpublished) works: Ella of the field of Waterloo and Feud of the Ormond and Desmond. For further information, please contact M&ARL.

Léonore Pinoteau – GdeLinares
Trainee Curator & Intern
Manuscripts & Archives Research Library

Changed Utterly: recording and reflecting on the Rising 1916 –2016

The Proclamation TCD Papyrus Case 16 no.1
The Proclamation TCD Papyrus Case 16 no.1

The Library of Trinity College Dublin has launched a Long Room exhibition to commemorate the 1916 Easter Rising. Changed Utterly: recording and reflecting on the Rising 1916 –2016 will run from 1 March to the end of April.

The exhibition features exhibits of unique material from Trinity’s Manuscripts & Archives Research Library and Early Printed Books collections relating to the 1916 Easter Rising, including photographs, diaries, memorabilia as well as digital content. The display will trace methods of recording and reflecting on the Rising from the initial scramble to record the events as they happened in 1916; the commemorative activity of 1966 and through to the Library’s current project to capture and preserve the 1916 related websites produced in 2016.

Silver cup presented to Cadet R N Tweedy of the Dublin University Officer Training corps for service during 1916. TCD MUN/OBJ/25
Silver cup presented to Cadet R N Tweedy of the Dublin University Officer Training Corps for service during 1916. TCD MUN/OBJ/25

Highlights of the exhibition include:

  • The Library’s copy of the Proclamation, said to have been torn from the walls of the GPO, along with the World War I recruitment posters found pasted to the back
  • Photograph of British Troops in the Front Square of Trinity College Dublin
  • The scrapbook of Elsie Mahaffy, daughter of Trinity Provost John Pentland Mahaffy, and occupant of the Provost’s house during the Rising
  • Silver cup presented to a member of the Dublin University Officer Training corps for service during 1916
  • The casing of a bullet which pierced the roof of the Library during Easter week 1916.

    The casing of a bullet which pierced the roof of the Library of Trinity College Dublin during Easter week 1916
    The casing of a bullet which pierced the roof of the Library of Trinity College Dublin during Easter week 1916

The items displayed all appear on the Library’s popular 1916 blog project Changed Utterly – Ireland and the Easter Rising.

The exhibition also showcases the work of the Library’s 1916 Web Archiving project which sees the Library working in collaboration with the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford and the British Library to archive websites from both the Irish and UK web domains as they reflect on the 1916 Easter Rising.

Photograph of Troops in Front Square TCD/MUN/MC/207
Photograph of Troops in the Front Square of Trinity College Dublin TCD/MUN/MC/207

The exhibition and web-archiving project are part of the Library’s contribution to the Trinity College Dublin Decade of Commemoration.

 

From Durham to Dublin: the journey of two fifteenth-century books

We recently received an enquiry from Dr Ian Doyle, former Keeper of Rare Books at Durham University Library, about two printed books from our collections with an intriguing provenance. The volumes form parts two and three of a six-volume set of a Latin Bible with the commentary of Nicholas de Lyra (c. 1270-1349), printed by Johann Froben and Johann Petri de Langendorff in Basel in 1498. Our two volumes, at shelfmark FF.dd.4-5, are recorded as having once been connected to a cell of Durham’s Benedictine cathedral priory of St Cuthbert by evidence of an ownership mark belonging to a monk of one of its religious houses.1 The volumes bear the inscription of Christopher Wyllye, monk of Durham, transcribed here from the first leaf of FF.dd.5: Liber dompni Xtoferi Wyllye monachi Dunelmensis.

Liber dompni Xtoferi Wyllye monachi Dunelmensis

Continue reading “From Durham to Dublin: the journey of two fifteenth-century books”

CERL Dublin Manuscripts Conference 25-27 May 2016

The 7th conference of CERL’s (Consortium of European Research Libraries https://www.cerl.org/) European Manuscript Librarians Expert Group, hosted by the cerl logoLibrary of Trinity College Dublin will take place 25-27 May 2016.

The primary aims of the Group are to act as a forum for curatorial concerns, and to enhance understanding and practical cooperation among curators across Europe. The conference will focus on these themes:

Commemorations and Anniversaries; Materiality; Post-digital issues and concerns.

Draft programme:

Wednesday 25 May, 1315 – 2000

  • Estelle Gittins, ‘Commemorating 1916 in the Library of Trinity College Dublin’
  • Bernard Meehan, ‘The Faddan More Psalter’
  • Susie Bioletti, ‘Early Results from the “Early Irish Manuscripts” Project’
  • Jennifer Edmond, ‘CENDARI: what next?’
  • Jane Ohlmeyer, ‘The 1641 Depositions: what now?’

Reception in Old Library with Book of Kells and exhibition of treasures

Thursday 26 May, 0930-1900

  • Ad Leerintveld, ‘Authenticating the coat of arms in a Gruuthuse manuscript’
  • Birgit Vinther Hansen, ‘Exhibition and fading of manuscripts: microfadometry and a lighting policy to increase exposure and reduce risk’
  • Nicholas Pickwoad, ‘Ligatus:  the importance of bindings and their description’
  • Claire Breay, ‘Commemorating the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta in 2015’
  • Allen Packwood, ‘The Churchill Papers: a modern historical epic’
  • Gerhard Müller, “Understanding Archival Metadata and Shaping Perspectives on the Benefits of Standards beyond the Simple Search.”

Reception at Royal Irish Academy and viewing of early medieval Irish manuscripts. Conference dinner, 1930

Friday 27 May, 0915-1200, private visits to Marsh’s Library and the Chester Beatty Library

FURTHER PAPERS WILL BE ADDED. FULL INFORMATION AND BOOKING FORM WILL FOLLOW SHORTLY.

Caoimhe Ní Ghormáin