Prudhoe Lions

One of the Prudhoe Lions.

The Prudhoe Lions are a pair of Ancient Egyptian red granite monumental sculptures dating from the 18th Dynasty, around 1370 BC. They are now in the British Museum.[1]

The lions originally stood as guardian figures at the Temple of Soleb in Nubia, which was built by the 18th dynasty King Tutankhamun.

Unsurprisingly for such magnificent statues, the lions carry many inscriptions which record their re-use by various rulers. The original inscriptions relate to the pharaoh Amenhotep III. The renewal of the temple by Tutankhamun is also recorded: "he who renewed the monument of (or 'for') his father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Lord of the Two Lands, Nebmare, image of Re, Son of Re, Amenophis, Ruler of Thebes"[2] Another inscription indicates that they were moved by Ay, Tutankhamun's successor. In the 3rd century BC the lions were moved to Jebel Barkal, a city to the south of the country by Amanislo, a Kushite king of Meroë. Following tradition, Amanislo also had his names engraved on the lions.[1]

In the early nineteenth century AD the lions were collected at Jebel Barkal by Lord Prudhoe, who gave them to the British Museum in 1835. The pair share the registration number EA 2.[1]

The lions measure c.1.20m high and c 2.20m long. They are in a relaxed, naturalistic pose, lying on their sides with their heads turned to the side and their front paws crossed, rather than in the stiffer traditional pose of the sphinx or lion, with its head facing forwards and paws extended to the front.[1]

Reading

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Collection online - The Prudhoe Lions". The British Museum. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  2. H. W. Fairman, "Tutankhamun and the end of the 18th Dynasty" Antiquity 1972.

External links

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