Stela and Fragments in the Grand Egyptian Museum

نوع المستند : المقالة الأصلية

المؤلف

Assistant Professor, Faculty of Archaeology,Qena South Valley University, Egypt

المستخلص

This paper is focusing on four  funerary fragments, namely inventory numbers Sr. 14170 , 10322 , and Sr 10220, preserved in the Grand Egyptian Museum.

الموضوعات الرئيسية


[1] For the stela, as a tearm, see K. Martin, LA VI, col. 1-6; R. Holzl,"Stela", in Oxford Ensyslopedia of Ancient Egypt III, Oxford, 2001, p. 319-324
[1] It  occurs from the Old Kingdom until the Roman Period. It is first found in the 4th dynasty after which it becomes increasingly common . It is translated as "He who is in the place of  embalmment", or He who is in the place of the mummy-wrappings ", The term wt does indeed refer to the bindings used for the body after mummification, and it would be appropriate to describe Anubis, who presided over the preservation of the body, see; Duquesne T., Jmjwt, UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, 2012, Wb. I, 73; for further bibliography of this sign see, Leitz, Christian (ed.), Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen. Vol. 1. Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 110. Dudley, MA, and Leuven: Peeters, 2002 ; Logan, Thomas, The origins of the Jmy-wt fetish. Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 27,1990,  pp. 61 – 69; Rössler-Köhler, Ursula, Das Imiut: Untersuchungen zur Darstellung und Bedeutung eines mit Anubis verbundenen religiösen Symbols. 2volumes. Göttinger Orientforschungen 4. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1975; Ibid,  Imiut. In Lexikon der Ägyptologie, Vol. 3 (columns 149 - 150), ed. Wolfgang Helck, and Wolfhart Westendorf. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1980 
[1] W. Barta, Aufbau und Bedeutung der altagyptischen Opferformel, AF 24, Gluckstadt, 1968, p. 53
[1] CG. 34052
[1]  I would like to express my deepest thanks and gratitude to Dr. T.S Tawfik, former Director of the Grand Egyptian Museum for permission to publish these pieces and for providing me with study assistance  in the Museum.
[1] See for example the Tomb of Weserhat at Thebes,   Davies, G., The Rock-Cut Tombs of Sheikh Abd El Qurneh, at Thebes,  The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, 6,  (1911), Figs 7-8. Mackay, E., On the Various Methods of representing hair in the Wall-Painting of the Theben Tombs, JEA , 5 (1918), Pp.113-116.; Younis, A., A stela of the Chief of the Workshops of Amun Pashed, Journal of the Faculty of Archaeology, Cairo, 2009, p.5.   Seele, K., The Tomb of Tjanefer at Thebes, OIP, LXXXVI, PL. 17- 22. Moursi, M., Two Ramesside stelae from Heliopolis, GM 150 (1988), PL. 1.
[1] Ranke, Die ägyptischen Personennamen, I, p.233.
[1] See his false door in the Egyptian Museum with TR 5.11.24.9. For it's  publication see,  Lowle, D., A.  Funerary Stela of the Troop-commander of the Army and stander Huy, SAK, 9 (1981), Pp.253-258.   
[1] The same title is occurred in the left jamb (b). See for this  Limestone statue, Roeder, G. Aegyptische inschriften aus den Königlichen museen zu Berlin, J. C. Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung, Leipzig, 1913, n. 2087.
[1] See his  funerary stela in the archaeological Museum in Al Salam School at Assiut  with inventory numbers 193.
[1] Lacau, Steles du Nouvel Empire, le Caire, 1909, p. 139-140
[1] Ranke, PN, p. 234, 13
[1] Ibid. p. 24, 1
[1] It is not attested in Ranke, PN
[1] Ibid. p. 233, 18
[1] Ibid. p. 242, 18
[1] It is not attested in Ranke, PN
[1] AEO 1,p.30* [99]; LEM S.499 (10,4)
[1] Dilwyn Jones, An Index of Ancient Egyptian Titles, Epithets and Phrases of the Old Kingdom, Oxford : Archaeopress, 2000, p.846
[1] Lacau, Steles du Nouvel Empire, le Caire, 1909
[1] Lacau, Steles du Nouvel Empire, le Caire, 1909
[1] Dilwyn Jones, An Index of Ancient Egyptian Titles, p. 478
[1] Wb. IV, 151 (5).