Search for Works of Art
| « Back | ||||
|
||||
![]() |
||||
| A Rare Ancient Egyptian Carved Limestone Sphinx Modelled With a Lions Tail and Paws ( Egypt 747 BC to 332 BC ) | ||||
Dimensions31.00cm wide 23.00cm high 10.50cm deep (12.20 inches wide 9.06 inches high 4.13 inches deep) | ||||
Provenance
Provenance: reputedly from Alexandria, bought in London in the 1950’s
|
||||
LiteratureThe Sphinx is a mythical beast most usually portrayed with the body of a lion and the head of a man often wearing the Royal Nemes head cloth as does the Great Sphinx at Giza. Statues of Sphinxes were also sometimes given the heads of rams or hawks, and in one unusual case from the mortuary temple of Amenhotep III (1390 – 1352 BC), a Sphinx was given the tail of a crocodile, perhaps in imitation of a beast associated with one of the Egyptian constellations. Women are rarely represented in the guise of a Sphinx and even Queen Hatshepsut (1473 – 1458 BC) assumed the form in her masculine role as King rather than as a woman. |
||||
Description / Expertise
A Rare Ancient Egyptian Carved Limestone Sphinx Modelled With a Lions Tail and
|
||||
|
Print
Contact Exhibitor
Email to a Friend