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Papyrus Large-Size - Princess on the Nile Boat

€3.20

Available, delivery time: 1-2 days

Product number: 2406


Natural papyrus with outline motif - natural edge - approx. 32 × 42 cm

This is how history can be "grasped"! A real experience and guaranteed unforgettable.
Ideal for thematic school and art lessons.

To the motif
Gold relief on the back of a throne. The motif shows the princess Sitamun, a concubine of Amenophis III, on a Nile boat.

For painting
12 double-fibre pencil - Article No. 2701
Pilot Pintor - White, Gold, Silver Article No. 2703
Set of 6 tempera paints - Article No. 2711
Set of 14 tempera colours - Article No. 2712
Brush set 6 pieces - Article No. 2713
Mixing palette - Article No. 2714

PGI Bookmark
made of hand-laid papyrus, produced in Egypt
silkscreen motif, natural border
can be coloured with fibre-tip pens and watercolours

Aspiration scale: Medium
Time Line: 2,0 Hours
Product information "Papyrus Large-Size - Princess on the Nile Boat"

Princess on the Nile boat
Gold relief on the back of a throne. The motif shows the princess Sitamun, a concubine of Amenophis III, on a Nile boat.

Sitamun was an ancient Egyptian princess of the 18th Dynasty and the first-born daughter of Pharaoh Amenophis III and his Great Royal Wife Teje. Probably in the 30th year of her reign, she married her father Amenophis III and, like her sister Isis later, became his "Great Royal Wife". This marriage did not necessarily mean an incestuous relationship, but could also have a ritual-religious character.

Papyrus boats
Boats made of bundles of dried papyrus, which grew in many places along the Nile in Ancient Egypt, were used to transport people and small loads over short distances and for river crossings. Papyrus is a light, flexible but not particularly durable material. Due to its low specific weight, it is buoyant. It is remarkable, however, that papyrus boats are always depicted in green colour. Fresh green papyrus, however, is much heavier and thus has a lower load-bearing capacity than dried material. The possession and use of these boats was also important for locomotion during the annual floods, as the fertile land was flooded and criss-crossed by numerous canals and bodies of water. Villages were often located on small elevations and could only be reached by boats. Papyrus boats were also used on religious occasions and occasionally as travelling vessels.