Statue of the scribe Senenmut

Loaned From: The British Museum

Quartzite

1470 BCE

Egypt

The British Museum

Details

Culture/Civilisation

Ancient Egypt

Theme

Writing

Subtheme

Deciphering Egyptian Hieroglyphs – The Rosetta Stone

Display Location

Coomaraswamy Hall

Findspot

Temple of Amun, (ancient Thebes), Karnak, Egypt

Measurements

54 x 30 x 35 cm

Accession Number

EA1513

Description

Senenmut was a prominent official under the female Pharaoh Hatshepsut. His portrait sums up the link between writing and power in ancient Egypt – essential for running the state and speaking to the gods.

Carved in quartzite, a stone reserved for the elite, it was made for the Temple of Amun at Karnak. Placed in tombs and temples, such block-like statues offered ideal surfaces for inscribing prayers, and providing biographical information.

The inscription in front invokes Amun-Ra, ‘Lord of the Thrones of the Two Lands (i.e. Upper and Lower Egypt), Chief of All the Gods’.

Related Objects

Pesshuper, the scribe

Pesshuper, the scribe

Scribal palette

Rosetta Stone (replica)

An official for the afterlife