Painted wooden model showing bakers at work
From Asyut, Egypt
12th Dynasty, around 1900 BC
Bread making was part of the day to day provisioning of palaces, ordinary
households, temples and tombs. Models placed inside tombs were intended to
capture the most characteristic elements of the process in order that it be
continued throughout eternity. The bread making model from the tomb of king
Nebhetepres Mentuhotep II, also in The British Museum, shows four component
operations: grinding, sifting, kneading and baking. It also shows the production
of bread on an industrial scale.12th Dynasty, around 1900 BC
This model is much more modest. It shows only kneading and baking, but the process is still recognizable. The small number of figures is balanced by the details incorporated into the modelling. The faces of the men are carefully painted, with intent expressions. The muscles on the chest of the rear figure show the effort that he is putting in to the kneading, which has caused flour to pour off the front of his work station. The foremost figure shields his face against the heat produced when he pokes the fire with a metal prod. The fire is cleverly shown using stacks of polygonal shapes, painted a fiery red.
W. Seipel, Ägypten: Götter, Gräber und di (Linz, 1980)
M. Stead, Egyptian life (London, The British Museum Press, 1986)
C.A.R. Andrews, Egyptian mummies (London, The British Museum Press, 1984)
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