30/05/2026
This is a beautiful facsimile by the British-American Egyptologist Charles K. Wilkinson (1897-1986) at the of the last two phrases of a typical Theban (modern-day Luxor) funerary procession of the New Kingdom: opening of the mouth ritual(s) and a memorial service and presentation of offerings to the glorified/blessed (Ax) dead before the tomb entrance of the Chief Sculptors and Artist(an)s Ipuky and Nebamun (TT181) in Sheikh Abd el-Qurna District of the Theban Necropolis.
Much like nowadays, formal flower arrangements could be ordered for funerals. The arrangements were organised and sewn together at nighttime to keep them fresh and cool by (master) and (chief) royal florists and gardeners who worked within the large Domain of Amun(-Ra) of Thebes like, but not limited to, Nefermenu, Qenamun, Sennefer, Nakht and his four sons and his likely foreign-born, Levantine father Gurer or the famous Senenmut.
While a sem-priest and purification (wab) priest ritually cense and libate Ipuky and Nebamun’s coffins, two female mourners offer three formal flower arrangements to them.
The three formal flower arrangements comprise taxa related to rebirth and resurrection: doum-palm fronds (Hyphaenae thebaica L.), poppy blossoms (Papaver spp.), persea (Mimusops laurifolia (Forssk.) Friis) and/or mandrake (Mandragora autumnalis Bertol.) fruit and leaves, Cyperaceae umbels and stems, and blue and white waterlily (N. caerulea Savigny and N. lotus L.) blossoms, rhizomes, and petals bound and sewn together.
Although the painting cannot be taken at face value due to Egyptian art conventions and what is referred to as the ‘grammaire des tombes’, the seasonality of the plants suggests the funeral(s) may have occurred in early spring to early summer. The two men were active during the reigns of Kings Thutmose IV to Amenhotep III (c. 1390-1349 BCE). 𓀾𓀾𓏭𓆰💐𓆰𓏫𓇋𓅓𓉐𓏤
Photograph courtesy of the Wilkinson facsimile (MMA 30.4.108) from 1920-1921 by ; Examples of real doum-palm fronds, poppy species, mandrake and persea fruits, Cyperaceae umbels, blue and white lotus via .