Imagine that you believe the body must be kept whole for the journey after death. Not just the outside, but every important part of the inside too. Imagine that you believe the liver, the lungs, the stomach, and the intestines each have their own divine guardian. Imagine that you believe the heart is so important that it must stay in the body itself, because the gods will weigh it after death to judge your life. This is what many ancient Egyptians believed. And because of this belief, when a person of means died in ancient Egypt, the people who prepared the body for burial removed four organs and placed each one in its own jar. These jars are called canopic jars. They were placed in the tomb alongside the mummy. Each jar had a lid shaped as the head of one of the Four Sons of Horus, the gods who were believed to protect those organs. The human-headed Imsety protected the liver. The baboon-headed Hapy protected the lungs. The jackal-headed Duamutef protected the stomach. The falcon-headed Qebehsenuef protected the intestines. Canopic jars were made in ancient Egypt for nearly 2,700 years, from the Old Kingdom to the Ptolemaic period. They changed over time. Early jars were plain stone with simple round lids. Later jars became elaborate works of art in alabaster, limestone, or glazed ceramic, painted with inscriptions and spells. The finest sets were made for pharaohs and senior officials. Simpler sets were made for those with less wealth. Today, thousands of canopic jars survive in museums around the world. They are among the most recognisable symbols of ancient Egyptian civilisation. They also sit at the centre of a serious ongoing debate about where ancient objects belong, who has the right to hold human remains, and whether objects removed from graves should be returned.
It tells us they took the afterlife very seriously as a practical matter, not just a philosophical idea. The mummification process was expensive, time-consuming, and required specialist knowledge. It could take up to 70 days. Only people with significant resources could afford a full mummification with a proper set of canopic jars. This is important: canopic jars mostly survive from the tombs of wealthy and powerful people. We know less about how ordinary Egyptians were buried, because their tombs were simpler and less well preserved. Students should see that the objects surviving in museums often represent the wealthy dead, not everyone. The canopic jar system also tells us about the relationship between science and religion in ancient Egypt. The embalmers understood that organs decay. They developed practical techniques to prevent decay. These techniques were understood as both practical and sacred.
Because religions are not fixed. They develop, change, and respond to political events. The change in canopic jar lids reflects a shift in Egyptian religious thinking about divine protection. Early jars suggest the dead person continues in a human form. Later jars suggest the dead person is under the specific protection of specific divine beings. By the Third Intermediate Period, improved embalming techniques meant the organs were sometimes returned to the body. But the jars were still placed in the tomb, now empty, because the tradition had become too important to abandon. This is a fascinating example of a religious practice persisting even after its original practical purpose had changed. Students should see that religious objects and practices change over time even within one civilisation. This is true of all religions, not just ancient Egyptian religion.
This is one of the live debates in the museum world today. It connects to the Benin Bronzes and the Rosetta Stone lessons in this collection. Strong answers will see that both sides have genuine points. The objects were made in Egypt, by Egyptians, for Egyptians, and express Egyptian religious beliefs. That is a strong connection to Egypt. But the museums that hold them have also created real knowledge about them, preserved them, and made them accessible to global audiences. There is no simple answer. The right path is probably careful negotiation, with Egyptian institutions and scholars fully involved. Students should also note that there is a specific issue with canopic jars: they may contain human remains. The question of what to do with ancient human remains is separate from, and perhaps more urgent than, the question of what to do with ordinary objects.
This is a genuinely hard question. There are real benefits to studying ancient human remains: we learn about diet, disease, migration, and history in ways that cannot be discovered otherwise. There are also real costs: we are disturbing what were meant to be permanent resting places, according to beliefs that were deeply held. Different communities have different views on this. Some Indigenous communities in other contexts have successfully argued that their ancestors' remains should not be studied without consent and should be returned for reburial. Ancient Egyptian communities are different in important ways: there is no continuous community with direct legal authority over New Kingdom burials. But modern Egyptians have a strong cultural connection to their ancient history, and the people who were mummified deserve to be thought of as people, not just as interesting specimens. Students should see that the right answer requires ongoing, case-by-case ethical judgement.
A canopic jar is one of a set of four funerary vessels used in ancient Egypt to store the organs removed during mummification. The four jars held the liver, lungs, stomach, and intestines. The heart was not removed because the Egyptians believed the gods would weigh it after death. Each jar had a lid shaped as one of the Four Sons of Horus: Imsety (human, liver), Hapy (baboon, lungs), Duamutef (jackal, stomach), and Qebehsenuef (falcon, intestines). Canopic jars were used from about 2686 BCE to about 30 BCE. They changed in design over time, from plain stone to elaborate alabaster or decorated pottery. Thousands survive in museums worldwide, mostly removed from Egypt in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Egypt has sought the return of some objects. Canopic jars sometimes still contain the preserved organs of ancient Egyptians, making them both art objects and human remains. Modern science uses CT scans and DNA analysis to study them. The ethical questions around their display and study are real and ongoing.
| Period | Canopic jar style | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| Old Kingdom (about 2686-2181 BCE) | Plain stone jars with simple round lids | The practice of removing organs for separate storage begins |
| First Intermediate Period (about 2181-2055 BCE) | Human-headed lids appear | Lids begin to represent the dead person or protective deities |
| New Kingdom (about 1550-1070 BCE) | Animal-headed lids: baboon, jackal, falcon, human | Lids now clearly represent the Four Sons of Horus; finest sets in alabaster |
| Third Intermediate Period (about 1070-664 BCE) | Sometimes empty jars, or small dummy jars | Improved embalming meant organs could stay in the body; jars remained as tradition |
| Late Period and Ptolemaic (about 664-30 BCE) | Practice gradually ends | Canopic jars fall out of use as burial practices change under Greek and later Roman influence |
| 18th-21st centuries CE | Removed to European and American museums | The debate about ownership, repatriation, and ethical display begins |
Canopic jars are empty containers used as decoration.
Canopic jars were functional funerary vessels used to store the actual preserved organs of the dead. Many surviving canopic jars still contain the preserved organs of ancient Egyptians, making them human remains as well as historical objects.
Museum display can make objects look merely decorative. Students need to understand what was actually inside them.
The brain was stored in a canopic jar.
The ancient Egyptians did not consider the brain important. During mummification, the brain was removed and discarded, usually extracted through the nose. The four organs stored in canopic jars were the liver, lungs, stomach, and intestines. The heart was left in the body.
This is a very common misconception. The heart-and-brain distinction is important for understanding Egyptian beliefs about the soul and judgment after death.
All ancient Egyptians were mummified with canopic jars.
Full mummification with a proper set of canopic jars was expensive and mostly limited to wealthy and powerful people. Ordinary Egyptians were buried more simply. The objects that survive in museums disproportionately represent the wealthy dead.
Museum collections can create the impression that wealthy burial practices were universal. This hides the lives of most ancient Egyptians.
It is obvious that canopic jars belong to Egypt and should be returned.
The question of who owns ancient objects is genuinely complex. The objects were made in Egypt by Egyptians for Egyptians, which is a strong claim. But museums have preserved, studied, and shared these objects for 200 years. The right path is probably careful negotiation, not a simple rule.
Presenting this as obvious in either direction prevents students from thinking carefully about a genuinely hard ethical and legal question.
The canopic jars often contain actual human remains: preserved organs of people who died thousands of years ago. Treat this with the same respect you would use for any human remains, regardless of age. Do not describe the organs or mummification process in graphic detail, especially with younger students. The lesson touches on death and the afterlife, which may be sensitive for students who have recently lost family members. Be attentive to this without singling anyone out. Treat ancient Egyptian religion with respect. It was a rich, sophisticated belief system practised for thousands of years. Do not present it as superstition or as simply wrong. Use phrases like 'Egyptians believed' rather than 'Egyptians thought that'. The repatriation debate is real and ongoing. Present it honestly, with arguments on both sides, without taking a simple position. Strong recent work by Egyptian scholars and institutions makes the case for return; strong arguments from museum professionals make the case for keeping. Be careful about the word 'mummy'. Popular culture has made it seem comic or frightening. Help students move past that to see mummies and canopic jars as real human remains from real people with real beliefs. Pronounce the names: Imsety ('IM-se-tee'), Hapy ('HAH-pee'), Duamutef ('doo-AH-moo-tef'), Qebehsenuef ('keh-BEH-seh-noo-ef'). Tell students these are transliterations and that scholars debate the exact ancient pronunciation. End the lesson on the present: the ethical questions around these objects are being debated now, by real scholars, museum directors, and Egyptian officials. The story is not finished.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the canopic jar.
What was a canopic jar used for?
Why was the heart not placed in a canopic jar?
How did the design of canopic jars change over time? Give one example.
What is the debate about canopic jars and repatriation?
Why do canopic jars raise ethical questions about museum display?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Ancient canopic jars contain the actual preserved organs of people who died 3,000 years ago. Should museums be allowed to display them? Should scientists be allowed to study them?
The ancient Egyptians believed in a very detailed afterlife with specific gods, judgments, and requirements. How should we teach ancient religious beliefs that are no longer widely practised?
If you were running a major museum and Egypt asked you to return a set of canopic jars, what would you do? What factors would matter most to you?
Your feedback helps other teachers and helps us improve TeachAnyClass.