24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

Exhibitions

Living And Dying In Ancient Egypt At The Hancock Museum

By Alastair Smith

25/08/2005

Image: Shows a photo of a bronze siamese cat statue

Bronze cat. © Trustees of the British Museum.

Alastair Smith shaves off an eyebrow and walks like an Egyptian down to the Hancock.

Brave explorers and code breakers should head to the Hancock Museum in Newcastle upon Tyne to find out how ancient Egyptians lived and what happened to them after they died.

The new exhibition, Egypt Revealed: Life & Death in Ancient Egypt – presented in partnership with the British Museum – contains many fascinating artefacts which shed light on the beliefs of a civilisation. It will run until April 23, 2006.

Displays of mummified animals and live scorpions, scarab beetles and snakes show the importance of animals to the Egyptians; who gave them spiritual significance and even shaved off an eyebrow as a mark of respect to a dead pet. The scarab was often used in amulets and scarab shaped stones were placed on the heart at the time of burial to encourage it to be kind in the spirit world.

This was vital to anyone wishing to enter the afterworld as Egyptians believed they were judged during the ‘weighing of the heart’. This ritual performed by the gods aimed to balance the heart against the feather of Ma’at to decide whether the deceased was just.

Image: Shows a photo of a mummy with a face painted on the head

Mummy of a young boy with portrait panel. © Trustees of the British Museum.

Other exhibits include mummies and papyrus fragments from the Book of the Dead which contained spells and instructions to help people to the afterlife.

Egyptians even had small models of servants, or Shawabti, made to do their work after they had died – a selection of which are on display in the exhibition.

Alongside the displays on death and funerary rituals are jewellery and artefacts showing how the ancient Egyptians lived.

Rather than wine, poor Egyptians drank beer, made using stale bread instead of hops and ate a variety of vegetables.

Models of houses and a granary show the way buildings may have looked - often having several storeys, whilst grain from the granary would also have been taken in lieu of taxes which were recorded on pottery fragments.

Image: Shows a photo of a stone pharoah statue

Rameses II. © Trustees of the British Museum.

The exhibition also explores the role of the many gods and pharaohs of ancient Egypt. Statues of the pharaohs indicate their power and influence – we learn that Rameses II commanded armies at the age of ten and fathered more than 100 children by eight wives and 100 concubines!

“While the pyramids, temples, mummies, hieroglyphs and Tutankhamen’s treasure tell us a lot about ancient Egypt they only provide part of the picture,” said Steve McLean, curator of the Hancock Museum. “This exciting exhibition will give visitors the chance to see what life was like for everyday people living in ancient Egypt.”

“Exploring Egyptian society, the Nile, religion, mummification, the afterlife and hieroglyphics,” he continued, “Egypt Revealed explores the myths and mystery surrounding one of the world’s most intriguing civilisations.”

Young visitors can also enter a prize draw for some Egyptian themed goodies by deciphering a hieroglyphic code hidden in the exhibition leaflet.

Egypt Revealed is the last major exhibition at the Hancock Museum before it closes next year as part of the Great North Museum development. The exhibition is supported by Tyne & Wear Museums’ Business Partners and is at the Hancock until 23 April 2006.

Image: Shows the Renaissance in the Regions logo

Alastair Smith is the 24 Hour Museum Renaissance Student Writer in the North East region. Renaissance is the groundbreaking initiative to transform England's regional museums, led by MLA, the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council.

Great North Museum
Barras Bridge, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, NE2 4PT, Tyne & Wear, England

Closed: The Hancock Museum closed its doors to the public on Sunday 23 April 2006 to begin its transformation as part of the Great North Museum - an exciting and innovative world-class visitor attraction designed for the 21st century. The new Museum opens in 2009.

Related Articles

Snakes Slither From Hancock Museum To Winter Gardens
Newcastle Museum Of Antiquities Remembered In Verse
The Great North Museum Project - Work On The Hancock Begins
News In Brief - Week Ending January 21 2007
Hancock Museum Mummy Begins To Reveal Its X-Ray Secrets
Last Chance To Visit Hancock Museum Before Major Refurbishment
SeaBritain 05 - Treasures Of The Sea At The Hancock Museum

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Artists As Witness To The Holocaust At Imperial War Museum

The Art Of Ladybird Books Celebrated At Havant Museum

Ford Madox Brown - The Unofficial Pre-Raphaelite At BMAG

Major New Hew Locke Art Installation Opens At Rivington Place

View Basket - Art Bought Online At The Hayward Project Space

Tattoos, Corsetting And Body Modification At Cartwright Hall

Fashion V Sport - New V&A Show Gives Fashion A Sporting Stance

Three Artists Are Pretty Vacant At London's Transition Gallery

The Courtauld Gallery Displays Full Collection of Cézannes

Hans Stakelbeek's Photos Of Afghanistan At PM Gallery Ealing

100 Years Of The TA At The Queen's Lancashire Regiment Museum

David Moore Reveals The Last Things At Belfast Exposed Gallery

Bugs Are Giants Of The Garden At The Lightbox In Woking

Shipley Art Gallery Analyses The Melancholy Mind

Last Chance To See - Inner Voices At Visual Imprints Artspace Brighton

Lord Byron's Spirit At Newstead Abbey, Nottingham

London's Cartoon Museum Celebrates 70 Years Of The Beano

Photographer Reveals Two Estates At Tredegar House, Newport

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top