Ancient Egypt and Archaeology Web Site

Brooklyn NY Nov-2005 0317 1

Stela of the Lady Takhenemet, possibly from Thebes, 25th Dynasty.

Although painted wooden stele are known from just before Dynasty XVIII (circa 1539-1295 BC), they did not become common until Dynasty XXI (circa 1070-945 BC), at the outset of the Third Intermediate Period (circa 1070-653 BC). Thereafter they were popular until the end of the Ptolemaic Period (305-30 BC).

 

These wooden stele were often deposited inside the burial chamber out of public view. As on countless earlier stela, the central scene usually shows the deceased making an offering to a deity, but on examples dating to the Third Intermediate Period the dead person makes the offering directly, without the assistance of another god.

Here Takhenemet pays homage to the hawk-headed solar god Re-Horakhty, who has the guise and costume of Osiris, lord of the underworld. The composite representation illustrates well the merging of religious beliefs that occurred in the Third Intermediate Period with regard to the solar and nether realms.

Contact & Feedback : Egyptology and Archaeology through Images : Page last updated on 17-December-2023