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Fragment
of a Tomb Wall
Plaster, straw, pigment
New Kingdom, Dynasty 18, Reigns of Thutmose IV-
Amenhotep III, ca. 1400-1352 B.C.
Thebes, Tomb of Huy, TT54
Purchased in Cairo, 1920
OIM 11047
 
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Cattle,
such as those shown in this fragment from a tomb wall, were among the
most important domesticated animals in ancient Egypt. Farmers raised them
for milking, or for fattening and slaughter as food. Cattle hide provided
leather for products that ranged from sandals to military shields.
As
draught animals, cattle could serve varied purposes. In this tomb scene
they are pulling a funeral cortege - no longer visible - while an attendant
purifies the funeral route by sprinkling milk on the ground. On Egyptian
farms, cattle pulled plows through the moist and fertile soil created
by the flooding of the Nile, while sowers followed behind scattering grain
for the year's crops.
Most
Egyptian people were farmers. Their main crops were the staples of life
- emmer wheat and barley for making bread and beer, and flax for making
linen cloth.
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