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  Worldvisitguide > Places > Metropolitan Museum... > Ancient Egypt > The Temple of Dendur > Statue of Sakhmet
Statue of Sakhmet
Artist : Anonyme

Model : Sekhmet
En relation avec : Nebma Rê (Aménophis III)
Mout

Material : Diorite
Acquisition : Gift of Henry Walters (1915)
XVIIIème dynastie
Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Temple of Dendur
Right - Ground Floor - Section 25
Item 14 on 18
Ancient Egypt
Sculpture (Statue)

Area related
Karnak (Egypte)
Site related :
Karnak



Description   

The six lion-headed figures represent the goddess Sakhmet, whose name means "the powerful one". Sakhmet was goddess of war, violent storms and pestilence. When she appesead, her powers of destruction could be used to protect, and in this aspect she became a goddess of healing.

These fugires probably once stood around the sacred lake of the temple of Mut at Karnak. In the early nineteenth century, more than 600 similar statues were found within the temple, and dozens may still be seen there today. One of the Sakhmet's many epithets was "the flame of Mut" and her close association with the goddess explains the presence of the statues in Mut's temple.

All the statues appear to be the same. In fact, they may be separated in two groups. The four at the left have been fashioned after the same model, probably not by the same sculptor. The bodies have similar proportions and the faces are narrow. The two at the right are of a different type, with broader faces and larger eyes. All these statues where dedicated to Amenhotep III. Inscriptions on two of them describe the pharaoh as "beloved by Sakhmet".

More pictures   
Item(s) related   
Bridgestone Museum of Art :
Ancient Art
Sekhmet
Statue
Anonyme
XIVth century

British Museum :
Egyptian sculpture
Statue of Sakhmet
Statue de Sakhmet
Statue
XVIIIème dynastie
Anonyme
near 1350 B.C.
Statues of Sekhmet
Statues
XVIIIème dynastie
Anonyme
near 1360 B.C.

Louvre Museum :
Le temple : première partie
La déesse Sekhmet
Statue
XVIIIème dynastie
Anonyme
from 1391 to 1353 B.C.
La déesse Sekhmet
Statue
XVIIIème dynastie
Anonyme
from 1391 to 1353 B.C.
Related article(s)   

Le temple de Louxor
Le temple de Louxor, dédié à la tirade des divinités de Thèbes Amon, Mout et Khonsou, était relié au premier pylône du Grand temple d'Amon à Karnak par un dromos rectiligne de 2.5 kilomètres bordé de plus de 700 sphinx qui traversait la ville.
Aménophis III et son temps
Aménophis III accéda au trône à l'âge de 10 ans. L'empire égyptien, à son apogée, s'étendait de la quatrième cataracte du Nil, au 18ème parallèle, à la Syrie.

 
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