Sacred animal mummy containing dog bones by Unknown Artist - ca. 400 B.C.–100 A.D - 28 x 6.5 x 10 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art Sacred animal mummy containing dog bones by Unknown Artist - ca. 400 B.C.–100 A.D - 28 x 6.5 x 10 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art

Sacred animal mummy containing dog bones

Dyed and undyed linen, animal remains, mummification materials • 28 x 6.5 x 10 cm
  • Unknown Artist Unknown Artist ca. 400 B.C.–100 A.D

The Egyptians considered certain individual animals to be living manifestations of a god, such as, since earliest times, the Apis bull. Those individuals were duly mummifed when they died and buried for eternal life, then replaced by another single living manifestation. During the first millennium BC, many multiples of animals associated with certain gods were specially raised in temple precincts as simultaneous avatars of that god and then mummified in large contingents and deposited in catacombs for eternal life. The ancient perception of these multiples, the evolution of the practice in this direction, and variations within the practice are not easily accessible to us. But the hundreds of thousands of often elaborately prepared animal mummies found in catacombs and other locales testify to its ancient resonance.

Research on animal mummies has shown that the majority of mummies found at the large animal cemetery sites are pre-adults who were purposely killed for use. Some of the mummies are actually ‘substitute’ mummies containing only a few bones or feathers or possibly just sticks or sand.