Brand: EgyptologyStoreEG.

Item Description:
YOUR FOUR BLUE UNIQUE CANOPIC JARS MADE FORM Flame Stone  with amazing colors 
the first jar is for ( ANUBIS the god of medicine)
the second (ISIS the goddess of love)
the third (BABOON the god of wisdom)
the fourth (HORUS the falcon god of life) 

each one of the canopic jars has one organ of the pharaohs 
HORUS(liver)
BABOON (kidney)
ISIS (intestine)
ANUBIS (brain) 

Ancient sculpture replica from the original one, 100% Egyptian HAND MADE
Made from Flame Stone
Height:  6.4 Inches
Width: 3 Inches
Depth: 3 Inches

The canopic jars are hollow from inside you can put candles or spices you can use your jars also in your kitchen or as a décor 

The canopic jars were four in number, each for the safekeeping of particular human organs all of which, it was believed, would be needed in the afterlife. There was no jar for the heart: the Egyptians believed it to be the seat of the soul, and so it was left inside the body
MADE IN EGYPT

History:
Canopic jar, in ancient Egyptian funerary ritual, covered vessel of wood, stone, pottery, or faience in which was buried the embalmed viscera removed from a body during the process of mummification. The earliest canopic jars, which came into use during the Old Kingdom (c. 2575–c. 2130 BCE), had plain lids, but during the Middle Kingdom (c. 1938–c. 1630 BCE) the jars were decorated with sculpted human heads; from the 19th dynasty until the end of the New Kingdom (1539–1075 BCE), the heads represented the four sons of the god Horus (jackal-headed Duamutef, falcon-headed Qebehsenuf, human-headed Imset, and baboon-headed Hapy). From the 21st to the 25th dynasty (1075–664 BCE), the practice began of returning the embalmed viscera to the body, prompting the appearance of “dummy” canopic jars, vessels in the shape of images of the sons of Horus but with no interior cavity.



 

Return Policy:
You can return our product and get a full refund or exchange the product with another one, however the the conditions must be met.
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Photo of the Remarkables mountain range in Queenstown, New Zealand.


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