This wooden π±ππΊ statue ππ ±ππΎ of Anubis πππͺπ ±π£ is one of my favorites because the piece is in such good condition! The black ππ paint π¨ππ ±ππΈπ¦ is still clearly visible and the wood π±ππΊ is so well preserved. Wood π±ππΊ is an organic material, and even in the dry heat of the desert π πππ it can still break down over thousands πΌπΌπΌ of years! My Nonno always pointed out every wooden π±ππΊ piece in a museum and told us how significant it was that the wood π±ππΊ was preserved.
This particular Anubis πππͺπ ±π£ piece is dated to the Ramesside Period, which was during the 19th-20th Dynasties of the New Kingdom. This style of statue ππ ±ππΎ depicting Anubis πππͺπ ±π£ actually became very popular during the Ptolemaic Period, and there is a piece similar to this in the Brooklyn Museum too!
This statue ππ ±ππΎ shows Anubis πππͺπ ±π£ in his jackal ππΏππ₯ form. The recumbent position is representative of him guarding the necropolis π΄ππΌ from high above on a hill ππΏπΏπ or mountain ππ ³- as was his role as the god πΉ of cemeteries and mummification π΄π§ππ ±π. One of his titles which is βLord of the Sacred Land ππ¦π,β exemplifies and highlights this role. The βsacred landβ mentioned in this title is another way to say βnecropolis π΄ππΌ!β
Another one of Anubisβ πππͺπ ±π£ titles is βupon his hill/mountain πΆπΊππβ and this hieroglyphic πΉππͺ phrase usually follows his name ππ in dedication texts! Again, this is representative of Anubisβ πππͺπ ±π£ role as protector π ππ‘π of the dead π ππ±; he was always standing watch from above!
An inscription ππ ±π would look like this: βπππͺπ ±π£πΆπΊππππ¦πβ which translates to βAnubis, Upon His Hill, Lord of the Sacred Land.β
This is my personal photograph and original text. DO NOT repost.
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[…] statue ππ ±ππΎ of Anubis πππͺπ ±π£ at the Brooklyn Museum is similar to the one I posted from the MET yesterday π΄ππ³! I love seeing βsisterβ pieces across […]