With people either losing or quitting their jobs, there are more job seekers out there to fall victim to scams. However, they’ve recently become even larger targets thanks in part to the pandemic. Work-at-home jobs have always been a target of scammers hoping to gain personal and financial information. That’s why we hand-screen every single job and company before it’s posted on our site: to help job seekers stay safe and avoid job search scams. FlexJobs’ CEO, Sara Sutton, started FlexJobs in 2007 to fight back against the frustrating-and often harmful-fraudulent scams in the work-at-home job market. Condition: Some chips and scratches basically good.Here at FlexJobs, we loathe job search scams and are truly interested in helping job seekers identify and steer clear of “too good to be true” job opportunities. 4 gods of Dead, 2 with panels on feet with jackals. Shrine with boat of Sokar Clairis 6 small panels on lower legs: 2 with winged crowned vultures, 2 cont. Ded symbol of Osiris with human head and arms (before him headdress of Amon-Re?) with Horus flanked by winged genii and sacred eyes. At foot is Anubis also with his symbol - 4 sons of Horus seated in corners with knives. Isis and Nephthys kneel on stools of similar patterns placed at head and feet. Mummy with beard on a bris under a catafalque both elaborately decorated. by clocked borders with 3 rows of imitation of stone inlay of wedge shaped units that sometimes adorned expensive coffins, at ends of which are either 4 gods of Dead or 2 winged genii Center - the symbol of Abydos - a primitive fetish who originally was composed of a wig up on a pole with 2 feathers on top as a headdress, flanked on both sides by winged uraei, 2 figures of Osiris and Isis, 4 sons of Horus standing, 2 on either side. Inner coffin: Small panels with gods - minor spirits, some unnamed - and demons, some of them accompanied by symbols for identification - separated by bands of conventional clocked pattern. Decorated with figures of various deities, etc. PROVENANCE Archaeological provenance not yet documented, probably from Thebes, Egypt by 1852, collected in Egypt by Henry Abbott of Cairo, Egypt and New York, NY 1859, purchased from Henry Abbott by the New-York Historical Society, New York, NY 1937, loaned by the New-York Historical Society to the Brooklyn Museum 1948, purchased from the New-York Historical Society by the Brooklyn Museum.ĬATALOGUE DESCRIPTION Cartonnage, with mummy, of a man. MEDIUM Linen, pigment, gesso, human remainsĭIMENSIONS 69 1/2 x 18 x 13 in. For instance, among the animal-headed deities depicted in a vertical line on either side of this mummy case, the falcon head symbolizes swiftness and keen eyesight, while the cow-headed deity is nurturing and protective. The role of each god in protecting the mummified individual and facilitating rebirth is exemplified by the animal head used to illustrate them. Various gods represented on a mummy case (or cartonnage) assisted in the transition to the afterlife. The ancient Egyptians believed that preserving a human body through mummification allowed the person’s spirit to enter the afterlife.
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