Today the city of Rome celebrates ‘Natale di Roma’—its 2779th birthday! Founded on 21 April, 753 BC by the legendary figure Romulus, who together with his twin Remus, appears on this copper alloy coin from the reign of Constantine, dated to between A.D. 332 and 333. CC.904
Posts by Garstang Museum of Archaeology
Our #ObjectoftheDay is this ancient Egyptian small stone triad statue. It shows the gods Osiris, Isis and Horus and can be dated to the Ptolemaic Period.
E.9324
#ancientegypt #triad #gods #Osiris #Isis #Horus #ptolemaicperiod #museum
This digitised glass plate negative shows a Predynastic four-legged bowl with white decorations. The photo was taken by Garstang in 1900-1901 during a survey of sites between Alawniyeh and Bet Khallaf in Egypt.
JG/F/2/1
#glassplatenegative #ancientegypt #predynastic #photo #survey #museum
Thie year's #WorldArtDay highlights “Art & Human Dignity: Human Rights and Healing Arts for a Culture of Peace”. We are sharing two of our Bes pots to celebrate ancient Egyptian healing arts. He was linked to the protection of mothers and children in ancient Egypt. E.6807 & E.6849
Come and visit us! We are open every Wednesday and Thursday from 10:00 to 16:00 😊
#open #visit #campuslife #UniversityofLiverpool #museum
#OnThisDay in 145 C.E., the future Roman emperor Septimius Severus was born. He reigned until 211 C.E., when he died in Eboracum, modern York & was succeeded by his two sons, Caracalla and Geta. This silver denarius shows a bust of the emperor on its obverse, and was minded in 200/201 C.E. CC.538
#ObjectoftheDay is this #ancientEgyptian menat counterpoise. These objects weighted the back of a collar or #necklace, so that it would sit properly on the wearer. Our menat is decorated with imagery featuring the #goddess #Hathor, in both human and bovine forms.
E.1471
This digitised glass plate negative shows stairway leading to the tomb at site R1 at Reqaqnah. The photo was taken in 1901-1902 by Garstang during his excavations at the site of Reqaqnah in Egypt.
JG/R/1/12
#ancientegypt #glassplatenegative #stairway #tomb #photo #excavations #museum
#ObjectoftheDay is this small terracotta figurine of #Athena, the Greek #goddess of wisdom. She wears armour, including a helmet, breastplate & shield. Her right arm is supported by a pillar. Dated to the late 5th or early 4th century B.C.E.
C.519
This digitised glass plate negative shows the head and shoulders of a statue depicting the Kushite deity Arensnuphis. The photo was taken in 1910 during Garstang’s excavations at the site of Meroë located in present day Sudan. JG/M/PA/14
#WildlifeWednesday & we are highlighting this #ancientEgyptian #Predynastic #ceramic D-ware vessel, which depicts some of the earliest images of #birds in flight. It can be dated to the Naqada II period & comes from the site of #Hierakonpolis. You can see it on display in the museum! E.6111
Cases in a museum gallery.
We are open every Wednesday and Thursday from 10:00 to 16:00, why not come and visit us?
#museum #visit #Liverpool
#ObjectoftheDay is this figurine of a woman from the #ancientEgyptian site of #Abydos. Possibly dating to the Middle Kingdom or Second Intermediate Period, it has bird-like features and ‘puncture’ decoration. The exact function of this type of figurines is unclear. E.6895
#WorldTheatreDay & we’re sharing this red figure pottery sherd decorated with the head of #Dionysus. Famously known as the #god of #wine he was also the god of theatre. This sherd probably dates to around the 5th century B.C.E., when worship of Dionysus was increasingly popular. C.694
In 1907 Garstang conducted a survey of Anatolia. This is a digitised glass plate negative photo from that survey and it shows an image of a tomb entrance with lion carvings at Ayazin in Turkey.
JG/HIT/AY/2
#Anatolia #survey #Tomb #lions #Turkey #digitisedphotography #glassplatenegative #museum
Our #ObjectoftheDay is this #ancientGreek (#Corinthian) #pyxis, a small, cylindrical vessel. t. It was used for storage of small items such as #jewellery & #cosmetics. This pyxis is decorated with black and brown shapes on its feet, and there are traces of black glaze on the inside. C.636
This digitised glass plate negative is from Garstang’s excavations at Abydos and shows one of the finds – a royal stela of the New Kingdom pharaoh Seti I.
#glassplatenegative #excavations #Abydos #ancientegypt #royal #newkingdom #pharaoh
#OnThisDay in 180 CE the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius died. He reigned first alongside his adopted brother, Lucius Verus, then his son & heir, Commodus. This sestertius dated to 161 CE, during the reign of Marcus’ predecessor Antoninus Pius. On the obverse, it shows the future emperor. CC.503
Come and visit us! We are open every Wednesday and Thursday from 10am to 4pm!
#garstangmuseum #museumvisit #visitliverpool #UniversityofLiverpool
This week’s digitised glass plate negative photo shows the Roman Fortress near Kostamneh and was taken in 1906.
JG/K/4/1/6
#glassplatenegative #photo #romanfortress #museum
#ThrowbackThursday to 2015 when our curator Dr Gina Criscenzo-Laycock installed this ancient Egyptian stela (from the Garstang Museum’s collection) in the Metropolitan Museum of Art for their temporary exhibition ‘Ancient Egypt Transformed: The Middle Kingdom’.
Our #objectoftheday is this ancient Egyptian set of colourful amethyst scarabs. Stringing them together was something done post excavation.
E.1200
#ancientegypt #amethyst #scarabs #museum
For #InternationalWomensDay we’re highlighting Tjawtayudenit, a songstress of Amun-Re from the Third Intermediate Period. This vignette comes from Tjawtayudenit's copy of the Book of the Dead. Here she is making an offering to the falcon-headed god Re-Horakhty.
E.507.1
This digitised photo negative from Garstang’s 1910 excavations of Meroë, shows a basalt statue. The statue was found in the Lion Temple and it depicts a ‘Royal Figure’.
JG/M/E/6
#photonegative #ancientsudan #meroë #excavations #statue #royal #lion #temple #museum
Our #Objectoftheday is this small circular oil #lamp, with pinched handle, deep bowl and small rounded spout. It has ribbed design on sides. The top depicts a #Centaur (a creature with the head, arms, and torso of a human and the body of a horse), while the base has a wheel decoration.
C.554
We are back to being open on Wednesdays and Thursdays (10:00 to 16:00), so why not come and a have peek at our collection?
#open #visit #universityofliverpool #campuslife #Liverpool #museum
This digitised #photo was originally taken in 1910 during Garstang’s #excavations at the ancient Sudanese settlement of #Meroë. The image shows a decorated #column discovered at site 266 (#Temple of Amun). It is part of Garstang’s glass plate negatives, now housed at the museum.
JG/M/D/64
#ObjectoftheDay is this ivory and slate bracelet. Discovered at the ancient site of Naqada in what is often referred to as the ‘Royal Tomb’ the burial place of Neith-hotep. She was an ancient Egyptian queen, who lived around 5000 years ago, at the very beginnings of written history. E.5199
#TransformationTuesday we are sharing this ancient Greek kylix (a popular kind of drinking cup), which has been reconstructed from 57 sherdsl! This example can be dated to the mid-6th century BCE, but vessels of this kind are common all throughout ancient Greek history. C.656
#OnThisDay in 4 C.E. Gaius Caesar, the eldest grandson of Rome’s first emperor Augustus, died in Anatolia aged 23. His death put into motion the eventual succession of Tiberius in 14 C.E. This silver denarius from our collection, shows the two brothers Gaius and Lucius on its reverse.
CC.386