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Karnak: First Barque Chapel of Ramses III, Osiride pillars

Date

Circa 1910

Creator

G. Massiot & cie
Part of: Architectural Lantern Slides of Egypt
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries

The first court is lined with eight Osiride statues of the king, with those to the west wearing the crown of the red crown of the south, while those on the east, the while crown of the north. The Osiride statues on the west hold the hek scepter in the left and and the nekhakha scepter in their right.

Karnak was the religious centre of ancient Thebes and site of a temple complex, covering 100 ha on the east bank of the Nile. Karnak was linked inseparably with Thebes, the Egyptian empire and the concept of pharaoh's divine power. The god Amun-Re was thought to send out from Karnak an energy on which depended the rhythm of the seasons, the Nile floods, crops, fertility and Egyptian order, for which his son the pharaoh stood as guarantor. Amun was pre-eminent among the several divinities worshipped at Karnak. He formed part of a divine triad with a secondary goddess associated with the lioness-goddess Mut, and the god-son Khons. Karnak consists of three precincts dedicated respectively to Amun, Mut and Montu (an ancient god of war, who later became regarded as an aspect of Amun). The precincts were walled to exclude the sacrilegious from the sanctuaries of the divinities. Within these walls are the remains of temples, obelisks, colossi, shrines, lakes, shops and priests' dwellings. The walls of the sanctuaries are covered with representations of divinities, hieroglyphic texts and the cartouches of the kings who built them.

Images

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Metadata

Creator
G. Massiot & cie
Date
Circa 1910
Publisher
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries
Material Type
photographs
Conditions Governing Access
To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library to arrange an appointment

Metadata

Campus Location
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries
Link to Finding Aid
https://curate.nd.edu/show/3484zg6778s
This digital collection may not include all items or all of the information available about the source collection. See the finding aid for more information.

Metadata

Contact Us

Our collection information is a work in progress and may be updated as new research findings emerge. If you have spotted an error, please contact Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries at asklib@nd.edu.


Also from Architectural Lantern Slides of Egypt

Minaret, possibly in the Sultan al-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qala'un Mosque, Cairo, Egypt

Minaret, possibly in the Sultan al-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qala'un Mosque, Cairo, Egypt

Obelisk, possibly Senusret I Obelisk, Heliopolis, Cairo, Egypt

Obelisk, possibly Senusret I Obelisk, Heliopolis, Cairo, Egypt

Temple, Thebes, Egypt, possibly Ramesseum

Temple, Thebes, Egypt, possibly Ramesseum

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Man standing next to Amenhotep III's plinth of red granite with sacred scarab on top

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Man standing next to Amenhotep III's plinth of red granite with sacred scarab on top

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Walls of first courtyard with braces in center

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Walls of first courtyard with braces in center

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Obelisks of Thutmose I and Hatshepsut before Fourth Pylon

Karnak, Precinct of Amun-Re: Obelisks of Thutmose I and Hatshepsut before Fourth Pylon

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