ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
Hi all. Remember this mysterious lady?



I looked her up in the Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen. That weighty tome gives her name as "Hknt-m-tp-n-nb.s", which it translates as "Die Preisende am Kopf ihres Vaters". (I have been struggling with online tools to make sense of this in English - possibly "Praise at the head of her fathers"?)

Now, what set me off all those years ago was a traveller's report of an ibis-headed goddess at Kom Ombo. This figure seems like a good match for the description, but has a vulture's head. Now it seems far more likely that the careful scholarly drawing is correct, but how to clear up the doubt, especially since IIUC the mammisi itself was washed away long ago?

Helpfully, the Lexikon provides the final bit of evidence: the same figure appears at Deir el Bahari, in the same vulture-headed form, with other "month-goddesses". I'll see if I can't find a picture of her.

So much for James Augustus St. John's shakti of Thoth! But my three-year search for her has been extremely educational. :)
ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
Remember this lady from Kom Ombo?


(For some reason, this image got a bunch of views from lj. Your guess is as good as mine.)

As you may recall, I was puzzled by the mismatch between a traveller's description of the figure as having an ibis head, and the vulture-headed drawing in Catalogue des monuments et inscriptions de l'Égypte antique.

But here's the same figure, this time from Monuments de l'Égypte et de la Nubie:



So that's two to one in favour of the ibis. :D

(I reckon that little lion head in the hieroglyphs is wrong, though.)

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Plaything of Sekhmet

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