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Granite stela of Hor and Suty

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Hor and Suty were twin brothers who held the titles of 'Overseer of Works' of Amun in Thebes, and in Karnak in particular. They set up this large stela to themselves. The frame is inscribed with invocations for funerary offerings; the central area shows the brothers offering to Osiris and Anubis, above twenty-one lines of a hymn to the sun-god Re. It would appear that these twins divided the work to be done between them.The stela is particularly important as evidence for the development of solar theology during the New Kingdom (about 1550-1070 BC). In this period increasing importance was placed in the life-giving qualities of the light of the sun-god, and in the physical manifestation of the sun, the disc known in Egyptian as Aten. Many scholars believe that this reached its peak with the so-called 'heretic pharaoh' Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV), much of whose religious beliefs seem to have been devoted to the worship of the disc and its light.At some later date it seems that Hor and Suty fell out of favour, since both their figures and most examples of their names have been carefully erased. The defacement of inscriptions was a common practice in ancient Egypt.

Details

  • Title: Granite stela of Hor and Suty
  • Location: The British Museum, Gallery 61
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 146.00cm; Width: 90.00cm; Thickness: 29.00cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: incised
  • Subject: ancient egyptian deity; eye of horus
  • Registration number: 0.826
  • Place: Found/Acquired Egypt
  • Period/culture: 18th Dynasty
  • Material: granodiorite
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Authority: Ruler Amenhotep III
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Anastasi, Giovanni

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