Perhaps no single object epitomizes the spirit of ancient Egypt better than the ushabti. Shaped like a divine mummy, the ushabti evokes the magical side of Eygptian belief in an...
Perhaps no single object epitomizes the spirit of ancient Egypt better than the ushabti. Shaped like a divine mummy, the ushabti evokes the magical side of Eygptian belief in an afterlife. The two hoes clutched in the hands and the basket carried on the back recall the rural, agrarian culture of the land. The word ushabti(supplanting the older term shawabti) literally means "the answerer". The function of these small figures is described in Chapter VI of the Book of the Dead: "O this ushabti. If (the deceased) is called upon to do hard labour in the hereafter, say thou: I am here." The ushabti was expected to answer the call to work in place of the deceased, and this passage was frequently inscribed on the figures themselves. Originally, a single ushabti was placed in any given tomb. But by the New Kingdom the statues had come to be regarded as servants and slaves for the deceased, rather than as a substitute. Many have been found buried together along with an overseer figure. In the course of Egyptian history, ushabtis were created from wood, stone, metal and faience. In the cultural ranaissance of the 26th Dynasty (Saite period), a green faience, the color of the Nile and evocative of the verdant landscape in springtime, was particularly popular. To gaze upon an ushabti today is to come face to face with the magic of ancient Egypt itself.