The Griffith Institute
Tutankhamun: Anatomy of an Excavation
The Howard Carter Archives
Photographs by Harry Burton
Introduction
Previous card Object page Main list Next card
Carter No.: 256ppp

Handlist description: Pectoral (gold, inlaid)

Card/Transcription No.: 256ppp-1


256, PPP. PECTORAL-gold inlaid 1

POSITION: PECTORAL: thorax, upper centre. CLASP: below nape of neck (see group 4 E).

DIMENSIONS: PECTORAL: Max. H. 6.5 cents; Max. W. 11.0 cents. CLASP: L. 4.0 cents.

DESCRIPTION: Nekhbet-vulture with drooping wings, holding in her talons šn-symbols; head facing to R. (South). Like the Nekhbet-insignia (256, S) of the diadem (256, O.) this vulture has all the characteristics of the sociable vulture which today, and probably in ancient times, has its habitat from the middle and upper provinces of Egypt southwards, and is practically never found in Lower Egypt.

The head and neck of gold, minutely and very realistically modelled, showing the wrinkled occiput, nostrils eyelids and eyebrows, and ears, and the partial covering of stiff-feathers on the neck - a distinctive

Card no. 256ppp-1 relating to Carter no. 256ppp
© Copyright Griffith Institute, 2000-2004
None of this material may be reproduced in any form without permission from
Griffith Institute, Oxford, OX1 2LG
Contact us
Tutankhamun: Anatomy of an Excavation
Concept & Direction: Jaromir Malek
Web Page & Database Designs: Jonathan Moffett
Scanning & transcript: Sue Hutchison, Elizabeth Miles, Diana Magee, Kent Rawlinson