logo
‘Rare and exciting': 4,000-year-old handprint found on Egyptian clay model

‘Rare and exciting': 4,000-year-old handprint found on Egyptian clay model

STV News28-07-2025
A handprint left 4,000 years ago on a clay model crafted to go inside an Egyptian tomb has been discovered during preparation for an exhibition at a museum.
The 'rare and exciting' complete handprint was probably made by the maker of the item who touched it before the clay dried, an Egyptologist at Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum said.
The imprint was left on the base of a 'soul house' – a clay model in the shape of a building which would then be placed inside a burial.
The model on which the handprint was discovered has been dated to around 2055–1650 BCE.
It had an open front space where items of food were laid out, in this example loaves of bread, a lettuce and an ox's head. Helen Strudwick views a 4,000-year-old ancient Egyptian handprint / Credit: Joe Giddens/PA
Soul houses may have acted as offering trays or provided a place for the soul of the deceased to live within the tomb.
Helen Strudwick, senior Egyptologist at the Fitzwilliam Museum, said: 'We've spotted traces of fingerprints left in wet varnish or on a coffin in the decoration, but it is rare and exciting to find a complete handprint underneath this soul house.
'This was left by the maker who touched it before the clay dried.
'I have never seen such a complete handprint on an Egyptian object before.'
The researcher, who is also curator of the museum's new Made in Ancient Egypt exhibition, continued: 'You can just imagine the person who made this, picking it up to move it out of the workshop to dry before firing.
'Things like this take you directly to the moment when the object was made and to the person who made it, which is the focus of our exhibition.'
Analysis of the item suggests the potter who made it first created a framework of wooden sticks and then coated it with clay to make a building with two storeys supported by pillars.
Staircases were formed by pinching the wet clay.
During firing the wooden framework burnt away, leaving empty spaces in their place.
The handprint found underneath was probably made when someone, perhaps the potter, moved the house out of the workshop to dry before firing in a kiln, according to the researchers.
Ceramics were widely used in ancient Egypt, mostly as functional objects but occasionally as decorative pieces.
The soul house will be on display in the Fitzwilliam's Made in Ancient Egypt exhibition which opens to the public on October 3.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bringing lynx back to Northumberland backed by 72% of locals, consultation finds
Bringing lynx back to Northumberland backed by 72% of locals, consultation finds

The Herald Scotland

time8 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Bringing lynx back to Northumberland backed by 72% of locals, consultation finds

While other lost or rare species such as beavers and pine martens are now staging comebacks in Britain, large predators such as lynx and wolves have proved more controversial, with concerns over their presence in a highly populated island and the risk they could pose to livestock. Conservationists say it is right to at least consider bringing back the lynx to help tackle problems caused by deer, boost woodland ecosystems and reverse declines in nature in Britain. A scientific assessment by the Missing Lynx Project has found the cats could thrive if released in Northumberland, the only area of England and Wales with enough woodland to support them. Nearly three-quarters of people in the project area supported a potential lynx reintroduction (Berndt Fischer/PA) Around 20 animals released over several years into the Kielder forest area could grow over time into a healthy population of around 50 in north-west Northumberland and bordering areas of Cumbria and southern Scotland, the peer-reviewed paper found. Findings from more than 1,000 questionnaires as part of a year-long social consultation by the project, led by The Lifescape Project in partnership with Northumberland Wildlife Trust and The Wildlife Trusts, show 72% of people in the project area support a potential lynx reintroduction. The consultation also included an exhibition touring the region visited by almost 10,000 people, more than 100 stakeholder meetings and one-to-one interviews with community groups, farmers, landowners, foresters and business, and a series of workshops. The project even ran trips for farmers to Europe to see how people were living with reintroduced lynx there. Now, the team is continuing to work with locals to discuss how a potential reintroduction could be managed and is urging people across the UK to get involved with a national questionnaire. Lynx are solitary animals around the size of a slim Labrador, with distinctive tufty ears, which live in forests and woodland, and catch their prey – mainly deer, but also foxes, rabbits and hares – by ambushing them. Mike Pratt, chief executive of Northumberland Wildlife Trust, said it was right to consider bringing back the species to what should be the wildest part of England. The lynx could provide benefits including controlling deer, managing woodland ecosystems better and even providing ecotourism opportunities – though the chance of actually seeing what he describes as 'ghosts of the woodland' is very small. He said: 'The power of it is having this creature that should always have been there in these forests of the borders, where it's almost a symbol of the wildness of that area. 'It would symbolise that we're really serious, in what should be the wildest part of the country, (about) bringing nature back.' North-west Northumberland is the only part of England with extensive forest that could support lynx, experts say (Owen Humphreys/PA) While the project would consider applying for a reintroduction licence 'down the line', following the positive response to the initial consultation, the focus now is on working up a plan with local people that is deliverable, he said. One of the key concerns with lynx is the likelihood of them taking sheep in fields adjoining woodland. Measures that could be used – as they have in Europe – to reduce the risk to livestock include electric fencing, guard dogs, compensation payments and people on the ground to respond to issues. Dr Deborah Brady, lead ecologist for the Lifescape Project, told the PA news agency: 'For this country we expect the risk to be reasonably low, but there is definitely a risk. 'Even if it is low, everything matters, for every sheep taken there is an impact on that individual farmer, both an emotional impact and a financial impact. 'We need to work really closely and carefully with farmers to think about how we best approach it.' Dr Brady is clear the cats pose no danger to people. 'They avoid people wherever they can, people rarely see them and there has been no recorded fatality from lynx ever, so they are no danger to adults or children, they are no danger to people,' she said. While she said their return is not going to be the 'silver bullet' to the problem of an overlarge deer population, as each lynx only kills one deer a week, the presence of a predator helps keeps herds moving and reduces overgrazing. The lynx population could grow to around 50 animals in the area, experts say (Ben Birchall/PA) Bringing back a native species such as the lynx can help rebuild ecosystems and start to 'turn the tide' on wildlife loss in the UK, one of the world's most nature-depleted countries, she said. Lauren Harrison, a sheep farmer on Hadrian's Wall, said she was excited but 'quite ignorant' about lynx before she visited the Missing Lynx exhibition. 'I was very excited and very positive, but I had concerns for the livestock,' she said. She has since gone on a visit with other farmers to Switzerland and Germany where she saw it was possible to live alongside the animals. Her land is sufficiently far from woodland not to be affected, but she said for farmers facing the small risk of losing sheep 'that needs to be managed, needs to be done in a way that's fair to farmers, that's practical, and doesn't get in the way of day-to-day life'. She urged other farmers in the area to get involved with the project. Alongside the practical benefits of bringing back lynx, there is an emotional value to returning the animals to Northumberland, she believes. 'It's a slightly forgotten-about area around here, we are a long way from Westminster and financial centres. 'Just to be the place that has this stunning creature coming back, I think it would give such a lift to know that's on our doorstep,' she said. To take part in the national survey on reintroducing lynx, people can visit:

Twin-credible as sisters shine with top marks
Twin-credible as sisters shine with top marks

Scotsman

time2 days ago

  • Scotsman

Twin-credible as sisters shine with top marks

PA Both girls achieved top marks Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Exams results day is a bittersweet milestone for Maisie and Lexie Speirs. While the twins have excelled academically, their success means they are about to be separated for the first time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Lexie - at the age of just 16 - is about to head to the University of Strathclyde to study product design engineering Maisie, however, is staying on for sixth year at Glasgow's King's Park High School where she'll study another glut of Highers and Advanced Highers. Maisie achieved top marks in Higher photography, sociology, English, maths and computing. Lexie bagged Higher maths, English, physics, politics and Advanced Higher graphics, having done her Higher graphics in fourth year. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It sounds like a lot of work. 'It nearly killed me,' Lexie said, cheerfully. The teenager is one of many Glasgow pupils who travel to other centres to study subjects not offered by their own school. It meant a lot of juggling and explaining to her teachers her workload. She also persuaded her teacher to run an Advanced Higher for her. But both young women are club runners and spent a lot of long runs during study leave mentally rehearsing their subjects. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad On going off to university at such a young age, Lexie said: 'I'm going to have to at some point, and we're going to have to split up at some point, so I'll push myself. 'And Maisie has a back up plan for me.' Maisie chipped in: 'Sports is one of our big things so if she can't join a running club and she needs a team around her, she's going to do netball. 'But she's going to do great and I'm just excited for her.' Sixth year will prove a challenge for Maisie as her parents insist she must sit Higher maths but photography is her passion and one of the reasons she wanted to attend King's Park.

Record number of Scots heading to university following exam results
Record number of Scots heading to university following exam results

STV News

time2 days ago

  • STV News

Record number of Scots heading to university following exam results

A record number of young people in Scotland have gained a place at university, new figures have shown. Statistics released by university and college admission body Ucas show 17,350 17 and 18-year-olds will be admitted this year, compared to 16,650 last year. The number of those from the most deprived backgrounds is also at its highest, at 2,060. However, the gap in the proportion of those accepted from the most deprived areas compared with the most affluent remains pronounced, with 16% from the 20% of areas described as the most deprived being accepted compared to 43.6% The total number of applicants from Scotland who secured a place at university this year actually fell compared to the figure for 2024, from 31,970 to 31,850, as a result of a decline in mature student applications. Some 3,660 students are set to come from abroad – an increase from 3,480 from last year. Dr Jo Saxton, chief executive of Ucas, said: 'I'm delighted to see record numbers of young people in Scotland accept a place at university or college via Ucas this year. 'Today's figures also show record numbers of accepted students aged 17 and 18 from the most disadvantaged backgrounds. 'This is testament to the tremendous efforts being made to support widening access to higher education in Scotland. 'Everyone at Ucas offers congratulations to those celebrating today and I would encourage any students considering higher education, even those who have yet to apply, to explore clearing. 'There are plenty of options for you to consider, with around 27,000 courses, including more than 2,700 at Scottish institutions. 'Ucas's team of expert advisers are also on hand to answer any questions on the phone, on our website and on social media.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store