AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE ANUBIS
PROPERTY FORMERLY IN THE COLLECTION OF BERNARD V. BOTHMER
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE ANUBIS

PTOLEMAIC PERIOD, 332-30 B.C.

Details
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE ANUBIS
PTOLEMAIC PERIOD, 332-30 B.C.
5 1/8 in. (13 cm.) high
Provenance
with Nassar Brothers, Cairo.
John Dimick (1898-1983), Chevy Chase, Maryland, acquired from the above, 1972.
Bernard V. Bothmer (1912-1993), New York, gifted from the above, 1983; thence by descent to the current owner.
Sale room notice
Please note this lot is being sold without a reserve.

Lot Essay

The partially-preserved inscription around the base reads: "“Anubis of Ra-Kereret(?), Hep(?)-wer-Aset-Usir (?), Justified, engendered by the Lady of the House Di(?)-Kh(?)…” Ra-Kereret is the name of the necropolis of Asyut, a place especially linked with the worship of Anubis (see A.H. Gardiner, Ancient Egyptian Onomastica II, pp. 73-4; T. DuQuesne, The Jackal Divinities of Egypt I, p. 174, 371). The inscription on either side of the figure and to the rear appear to be carved into the bronze whereas the frontal inscription is cast. This variation suggests that the carved inscriptions were added at a later date, perhaps by a less literate hand or the owner of this Anubis.

Bernard V. Bothmer was one of the twentieth century's most distinguished Egyptologists and a curator at the Brooklyn Museum. His lasting contribution to the field was the study of the Late Period. This Anubis was formerly in the collection of John Dimick, a former C.I.A. agent turned archaeologist who helped discover the Embalming House of ancient Memphis.

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