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Limestone carved raised relief that represents King Tuthmose I, wearing the khat wig-cover and facing right; above his head is the bottom of his cartouche showing only the final "ka" sign. Outside the cartouche on the left is a circular hieroglyph without internal markings and the very end of a low broad sign. The area below the neck is of particular interest: it is clear that the king's arms were originally raised, in the act of offering before a god. The angle suggests he was offering conical loaves of bread (Gardnier Sign List X8) rather than a "nw" pot. There are traces of red pigment in the corner of the mouth, the nostril, the ear and within the lines of the arms. This piece was probably taken from the end wall of the hall of the Anubis Chapel in the Middle Terrace at Hatshepsut's temple at Deir el-Bahari (PM II2, pp. 354-5). In Norwich Castle Museum there is another piece from the same collector, showing a queen wearing a vulture headress (no. 15.43).
Filename
Relief Tuthmose I limestone World Museum Liverpool Tuthmose I Deir el Bahri 56.22.141.jpg
Filesize
60280
Uploaded
3DImages on 2018-06-24 14:19:04
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Sketchfab:
96702bb418254b8db8d9aa1a9e8e5d95

File ID:
30178
Classification Info:
type
Relief
material
Limestone
time
Thutmose I Aakheperkare
housed
World Museum, Liverpool, UK
location
Deir el-Bahri
source
Other copyright owner
copyright
Attribution-NonCommercial
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