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İsim Untitled
Basım Tarihi: 1539 - 1292 BCE
Basım Yeri - Penn Museum
Konu king,sun,Aten | more | less
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane: Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası E16230 | 35223
Kayıt Numarası penn-museum-35223
Lokasyon Penn Museum
Tarih 1539 - 1292 BCE
Notlar Quartzite inscribed block decorated on one face with five scenes showing Akhenaten with his eldest daughter Meretaten. The block originally belonged to the pylon gateway of a royal "sunshade" or solar chapel dedicated to the worship of the Aten. This building was ornately decorated with inlaid faience, now missing, composing the figures of Akhenaten and Meretaten, as well as most other parts of the decoration. The sunshade chapel was a relatively small, probably single-chamber, building that would have originally stood on a raised podium inside of a larger building.The inscriptions state this building to have been located " in Akhetaten" - the capital city of Tell el-Amarna. This piece was part of what was once a larger block that included the door frame and lintel of the left side of the chapel pylon. It was cut down during the reign of Merenptah (Dynasty 19 ) when the block was reused as a plinth for a sphinx. Inscriptions on the edges of the block have the titulary of Merenptah and the epithet:"beloved of Ra-Horakhty in Heliopolis". The reused block must have stood in a temple at Heliopolis. It was reused a third time as a door threshold in Medieval Cairo. It was recovered from the Mousky area of Cairo in 1899 by the Egyptian Service des Antiquites and sold to Mr. Jones Wister of Germantown, Philadelphia. | Height: 231.9 | Width: 66.0 | Depth: 24.0 | Measurement unit: Centimeters/Inches | more | less
Parçası Olduğu Curatorial section: Egyptian
Malzeme Quartzite
Zaman Dilimi New Kingdom,Eighteenth Dynasty
Kaynağa git Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi Digital Library of the Middle East
Digital Library of the Middle East Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kaynağa git

Untitled

Basım Tarihi 1539 - 1292 BCE
Basım Yeri - Penn Museum
Konu king,sun,Aten | more | less
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası E16230 | 35223
Kayıt Numarası penn-museum-35223
Lokasyon Penn Museum
Tarih 1539 - 1292 BCE
Notlar Quartzite inscribed block decorated on one face with five scenes showing Akhenaten with his eldest daughter Meretaten. The block originally belonged to the pylon gateway of a royal "sunshade" or solar chapel dedicated to the worship of the Aten. This building was ornately decorated with inlaid faience, now missing, composing the figures of Akhenaten and Meretaten, as well as most other parts of the decoration. The sunshade chapel was a relatively small, probably single-chamber, building that would have originally stood on a raised podium inside of a larger building.The inscriptions state this building to have been located " in Akhetaten" - the capital city of Tell el-Amarna. This piece was part of what was once a larger block that included the door frame and lintel of the left side of the chapel pylon. It was cut down during the reign of Merenptah (Dynasty 19 ) when the block was reused as a plinth for a sphinx. Inscriptions on the edges of the block have the titulary of Merenptah and the epithet:"beloved of Ra-Horakhty in Heliopolis". The reused block must have stood in a temple at Heliopolis. It was reused a third time as a door threshold in Medieval Cairo. It was recovered from the Mousky area of Cairo in 1899 by the Egyptian Service des Antiquites and sold to Mr. Jones Wister of Germantown, Philadelphia. | Height: 231.9 | Width: 66.0 | Depth: 24.0 | Measurement unit: Centimeters/Inches | more | less
Parçası Olduğu Curatorial section: Egyptian
Malzeme Quartzite
Zaman Dilimi New Kingdom,Eighteenth Dynasty
Digital Library of the Middle East
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