Letβs read some hieroglyphs πΉππͺ on this Bronze Blade with Hatshepsut’s name!
While it doesnβt look like much, this piece is actually a bronze ππ€ππ¦ blade π π§πππ΄ that was once attached to a handle. This was one of my favorite objects that I saw at the Petrie Museum because it has Hatshepsutβs ππ ππΉππππΌπͺ throne name on it!
I also think this piece is unpublished, so it was a total surprise for me to see that it even existed! Since her name ππappears on the blade π π§πππ΄, it means that it was most certainly made during Hatshepsutβs ππ ππΉππππΌπͺ time as pharaoh ππ».
Letβs take a closer look at the hieroglyphs πΉππͺ!
π€πΉ – Great God
(π³π¦π) – Maatkare (Hatshepsutβs Throne Name which translates to βTruth π¦ is the Soul π of Re π³.β)
ππ π – Amun
π – Foremost
π¦π¦π- Holiest of Holies (the name given to Hatshepsutβs temple at Deir el-Bahri. It can also be written as π¦ππ¦π₯π).
πΊπ – Beloved
Put together, the inscription reads: π€πΉ(π³π¦π)ππ πππ¦π¦ππΊπ βThe Great God Maatkare, Beloved of Amun, Foremost of the Holiest of Holies.β
Interestingly, Hatshepsut ππ ππΉππππΌπͺ is referred to as βThe Great God π€πΉβ instead of the βGreat Goddess π€πΉπβ as she usually is in inscriptions πππ₯. Certain inscriptions πππ₯ towards the later part of her reign πΎππ did sometimes omit the feminine ending of the word, so this might mean the blade π π§πππ΄ is from the late part of her rule πΎππ. Or this could just be a spacing issue – the blade π π§πππ΄ is small πππ΄π © so maybe not all of the hieroglyphs πΉππͺ could fit!
This is my personal photograph and original text. DO NOT repost.