AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS
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AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS

LATE PERIOD - PTOLEMAIC PERIOD, CIRCA 664-30 B.C.

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AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE SEATED ISIS
LATE PERIOD - PTOLEMAIC PERIOD, CIRCA 664-30 B.C.
12 ½ in. (31.5 cm.) high
來源
with Merrin Gallery, New York.
Acquired from the above in 1978.

榮譽呈獻

Claudio Corsi
Claudio Corsi Specialist, Head of Department

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The impressively large statue depicts the seated goddess Isis, wearing a tightly-fitted sheath dress, tripartite wig and uraeus headdress, fronted by a larger central uraeus, surmounted by Hathor horns supporting a solar disk, with her eyes inlaid. On her lap she would have held a separately made figure of her divine son Horus suckling at her breast.

According to the myth Isis was the sister-wife of Osiris. After his defeat and murder at the hands of his enemy Seth, Isis uses her magic to revive his sexual member and become pregnant. She then flees to the marshes of the Delta where she gives birth to her son Horus, the rightful heir to the kingdom of Egypt. Representations of Isis nursing her son Horus were hugely popular in Egypt, from votive bronze figures to small amulets, showing how important her cult was in particular during the Late Period. Even when new religions are introduced to Egypt during the Ptolemaic and Roman periods, her popularity continues to grow and with time she becomes assimilated with Aphrodite/Venus.

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