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Tablet depicting a king worshipping the god Sobek

Tablet depicting a king worshipping the god Sobek
© BA Antiquities Museum/M. Aly

where to find


Storeroom

Stele depicting Ptolemy X worshiping the god Sobek

Category:
  • Written documents, tablets / slabs
  • Religious / Cult objects, stelae
Date:
Graeco-Roman Period, Ptolemaic Period, 14 February 95 BCE
Provenance:
Upper Egypt, Fayoum
Material(s):
Rock, limestone
Length:
53 cm;
Width:
37 cm
where to find:
Storeroom


Description

Stela with an arched top decorated with a winged sun disk flanked by two cobras. On both sides of the main scene are two papyrus-shaped columns. King Ptolemy X is depicted making offerings to Sobek, the crocodile god who is, here, surmounting a naos. The king, depicted in the ancient Egyptian form, is raising his right hand in a worshipping position, while holding a vessel in the left. In the middle, is an offering table, under which are depicted two amphorae. The lower part of the stela bears a twelve-line inscription in ancient Greek.


The information given here is subject to modification/update as a result of ongoing research.

References
  • Wilhelm Dittenberger, ed., Orientis graeci inscriptiones selectee: Supplementum Sylloges inscriptionum graecarum, vol. 1 (Leipzig: S. Hirzel, 1903): 259, no. 178.
  • Bernand Étienne, Recueil des inscriptions grecques du Fayoum, vol. 3, la "Méris" de Polémôn, Bibliothèque d'étude 80 (Cairo: Institut Français d'Archéologie Oriental, 1981): 201.
  • John Pentland Mahaffy, “Documents Egyptiens”, Bulletin de correspondance hellénique 18 (1894): 148, no. 2.
  • Joseph Grafton Milne, Greek Inscriptions, Catalogue général des antiquités égyptiennes du Musée du Caire, nos. 9201-9400, 26001-26123, 33001-33037 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1905): 24, no. 9201.
  • Max Lebrecht Strack, Die Dynastie der Ptolemäer (Berlin: Verlag von Wilheim Hertz 1897): 265, no. 142.
  • Max Lebrecht Strack, “Inschriften aus der Zeit der Ptolemäer”, Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Athenische Abteilung 19 (1894): 212-219, no. 1.
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