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Red sandstone relief from the pyramid chapel of Queen Shanakdakhete

-199/-100

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The royal cemetery at Meroe has given the name 'Meroitic' to the later stages of rule by the Kushite kings. The Meroitic script has been deciphered, but the language is still not fully understood. This wall comes from one of the small steep-sided pyramids with chapels in which the rulers were buried. It was probably that of Queen Shanakdakhete, the first female ruler. She appears here enthroned with a prince, and protected by a winged Isis. In front of her are rows of offering bearers and also scenes of rituals including the judgement of the queen before Osiris. Although the reliefs are in a style that looks Egyptian, they have their own, independently developed, characteristics. The term 'Kush' or 'Kushite' was used long before the eighth century BC to refer to Nubian ruling powers. But it is particularly used to describe the cultures whose first major contact with Egypt began with the Twenty-fifth Dynasty, and whose Nubian kings put an end to the fragmented state of Egypt by 715 BC. However, Kushite rule did not last long in Egypt. In the face of Assyrian attack, the last Kushite kings, Taharqa and Tanutamun, fled to Nubia. There they and their descendants were dominant until the fourth century AD, and were buried at el-Kurru, Nuri, Gebel Barkal, and Meroe.

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  • Title: Red sandstone relief from the pyramid chapel of Queen Shanakdakhete
  • Date Created: -199/-100
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 244.00cm; Width: 455.50cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Subject: attendant; ancient egyptian deity
  • Registration number: 1905,0410.1
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Mero
  • Period/culture: Kushite; Meroitic
  • Material: sandstone
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Donated by Sudan, Government of
British Museum

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