Padiiset's Statue
Padiiset's Statue in the Walters Art Museum, showing the front and back views | |
Material | Basalt |
---|---|
Writing | Egyptian hieroglyphs |
Created | 1780-1700 BC (Inscription: 900-850 BC) |
Discovered | 1894 |
Present location | Walters Art Museum |
Identification | 22203 |
Padiiset's Statue or Pateese's Statue,[1] also described as the Statue of a vizier usurped by Padiiset, is a basalt statue found in 1894 in the Egyptian delta which includes an inscription referring to trade between Canaan and Ancient Egypt during the Third Intermediate Period.[2][3][4] It was purchased by Henry Walters in 1928, and is now in the Walters Art Museum.
It is the last known Egyptian reference to Canaan, coming more than 300 years after the preceding known inscription.[5]
The statue is made of black basalt and measures 30.5 x 10.25 x 11.5 cm, and was created in the Middle Kingdom period to commemorate a government vizier. Scholars believe that a millennium later the original inscription was erased and replaced with inscriptions on the front and back representing "Pa-di-iset, son of Apy" and worshipping the gods Osiris, Horus, and Isis.[6]
The inscriptions read:
Ka of Osiris: Pa-di-iset, the justified, son of Apy.
The only renowned one, the impartial envoy/commissioner/messenger of/for Canaan of/for Peleset, Pa-di-iset, son of Apy.
External links
- Editio princeps: Émile Gaston Chassinat, "Un interprète égyptien pour les pays cananéens". Bulletin de L'Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale 1, 1901, 98
- Drews, Robert (1998), "Canaanites and Philistines", Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, 81: 39–61
References
- ↑ Lemche, p.54
- ↑ Statue of a vizier usurped by Padiiset, at the Walters Art Museum
- ↑ The Statuette of an Egyptian Commissioner in Syria, Georg Steindorff, The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, Vol. 25, No. 1 (Jun., 1939), pp. 30-33
- ↑ The Philistines in Transition: A History from Ca. 1000-730 B.C.E., Carl S. Ehrlich, p65
- ↑ Drews 1998, p. 49a:"In the Papyrus Harris, from the middle of the twelfth century, the late Ramesses III claims to have built for Amon a temple in ‘the Canaan’ of Djahi. More than three centuries later comes the next—and very last—Egyptian reference to ‘Canaan’ or ‘the Canaan’: a basalt statuette, usually assigned to the Twenty-Second Dynasty, is labeled, ‘Envoy of the Canaan and of Palestine, Pa-di-Eset, the son of Apy’."
- ↑ Helmut Brandl, Untersuchungen zur steinernen Privatplastik der Dritten Zwischenzeit: Typologie - Ikonographie -Stilistik, mbv-publishers, Berlin 2008, pp. 218-219, pls. 122, 180b, 186a (doc. U-1.1).