Through the Eyes of the Beholder: Motifs (Re)Interpreted in the 27th Dynasty
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Spearing Motif
2.1. Overview
2.2. Persian (Re)Interpretation
3. Bound Captives Motif
3.1. Overview
3.2. Persian (Re)Interpretation
4. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | There are at least two scenes in Karnak, one of Seti I and one of Ramesses III, in which the king in both vignettes is spearing Libyan enemies. See (Heinz 2001) for a discussion of New Kingdom bas-relief scenes of warfare featuring the king. Most commonly, the king is depicted in a smiting posture or upon a chariot rather than in a spearing posture. |
2 | Egyptian Museum in Cairo JE 60709 and JE 60710. At the time of writing this article, JE 60709 has been assigned Grand Egyptian Museum #338 and has possibly been moved to that location. |
3 | Note that I prefer to use terms like “controlling” or “balancing” when discussing the complex relationship of order and chaos in the Egyptian mindset rather than “defeating” or “vanquishing.” A reductive viewpoint is that order should always vanquish chaos, but, in reality, the Egyptian perspective of such forces was much more nuanced. Chaos was not a force to be exterminated but rather one to be controlled and utilized in harmony with order. For the cosmogonic perpetuation of the universe, chaos was needed just as much as order, although perhaps in controlled ways and limited settings. Much more critical than the complete triumph of order over chaos was for order and chaos to work together in balanced tandem. |
4 | See (Lichtheim 2006, pp. 214–23; Simpson 2003, pp. 91–103) for translations. |
5 | This used to be the traditional narrative in Egyptology for art and text of the Persian Period, and more broadly all of Egypt’s Late Period. Recent scholarship, including (Kuhrt 2007; Agut-Labordère 2016; Wasmuth 2017; Colburn 2020; Wasmuth and Creasman 2020), challenge and successfully refute this notion, and my perspectives on this matter are greatly indebtted to their (re)interpretations of Achaemenid material in Egypt. |
6 | There is some debate as to whether all images of the spearing figure can be definitely identified as a Persian king based on variations in the depictions of the figure’s headgear. Margaret Cool Root also correctly points out distinctions between seals that can be considered “official” Achaemenid seals (those that were commissioned specifically for Achaemenid court use) and “personal” seals (those that may or may not have been used in an office capacity but were commissioned by personal holders of these offices and therefore do not necessarily represent an official iconographic program of the king) (Cool Root 2021b, pp. 118–20). Cool Root’s distinction supports the claim that not all spearing figures should be interpreted as the king, but I agree with the opinion of John O. Hyland (Hyland 2022) who points to other examples of a clearly identified Persian king wearing similar headgear; while the identity of the spearing figure may not be determined beyond a doubt, the possibility of that figure being the king should not be discounted. |
7 | See (Tuplin 2020) for a full survey of Achaemenid spearing scenes, featuring both scenes with the king spearing enemies and soldiers spearing enemies. |
8 | Another example of this interesting scene exists. A limestone stela in the Walters Art Museum (Walters Art Museum 22.39) shows the same falcon-headed, winged deity wearing the double crown wielding a spear. An attacking lion is also present. And, while the spearing deity has no label to confirm a Sethian identity, the artistic similarities speak to that interpretation. The only difference is that instead of Apophis, a metaphorical enemy, the vanquished is now human. While this piece is currently dated to the Ptolemaic period (late 4th–late 1st century BCE), perhaps an earlier, Late Period date may be considered. |
9 | Most notably, the tomb of Tutankhamun has preserved objects that have handles, linchpins, furniture pieces, and jewelry all modeled from bound captive figures. See (Janzen 2013, pp. 53–97) for a full list and discussion of these objects. |
10 | Because there is no formalized list from ancient Egypt of nine specific, named foreign enemy groups, the number nine should instead be taken to represent a totality of all enemies, stemming from the pluralized number three compounded by itself, representing a total whole in the Egyptian mindset. |
11 | See, for example, the Scorpion mace head, predynastic, Ashmolean Museum, AN1896-1908.E.3632. |
12 | See, for example, the statue base of Djoser, 3rd Dynasty, Egyptian Museum in Cairo, JE49889. |
13 | See, for example, faience tiles depicting the rekhyt bird from Ramses III’s temple of Medinet Habu. For a full discussion of rekhyt bird imagery, see (Griffin 2006). |
14 | For a discussion of the playful use of hieroglyphs in the statue inscriptions, see (Blöbaum 2019). |
15 | It should be noted that the Achaemenid administration is not the first to play with details and motifs such as this. In the 25th Dyansty, the Kushite kings depicted themselves in repetitive rows supporting stars and the sky (in the form of the pet-sign) on barque shrines at the Amun Temple at Gebel Barkal. See (Dunham 1970, pp. 41–84; Kendall and Mohamed 2022, pp. 61–71) for a discussion of the Great Temple of Amun and associated barque shrines. For a comprehensive discussion of Nubian art and artistic signifiers, see (Török 2002). This positions the Achaemenid administration in a long tradition of artistic innovation in Egypt’s Late Period. |
16 | See (Stevens 2020) for a discussion of this topic. |
17 | For a discussion of Achaemenid administration in Egypt, see (Agut-Labordère 2021). |
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Stevens, M. Through the Eyes of the Beholder: Motifs (Re)Interpreted in the 27th Dynasty. Arts 2024, 13, 76. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030076
Stevens M. Through the Eyes of the Beholder: Motifs (Re)Interpreted in the 27th Dynasty. Arts. 2024; 13(3):76. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030076
Chicago/Turabian StyleStevens, Marissa. 2024. "Through the Eyes of the Beholder: Motifs (Re)Interpreted in the 27th Dynasty" Arts 13, no. 3: 76. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030076
APA StyleStevens, M. (2024). Through the Eyes of the Beholder: Motifs (Re)Interpreted in the 27th Dynasty. Arts, 13(3), 76. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13030076