Loading, please wait...

Use mousewheel to zoom in and out, click to enlarge

Details

LOT 0479

Egyptian Bronze Statue of a Kneeling Priest

LATE PERIOD, 664-332 B.C.

1 1/8 in. (41 grams total, statue: 30 mm high).

Kneeling on a rectangular platform with a wide apron covering his thighs, clean-shaven head and hands raised in adoration; tang on the underside for attachment; mounted on a display stand.

Provenance

From an early 20th century Home Counties, UK, collection.

Literature

Cf. Roeder, G., Ägyptische Bronzefiguren II, Berlin, 1956, pl. 47f-h, for bronze kneeling priest figurines in a similar pose.

Footnotes

Priest figurines like this were commonly placed before a larger deity figurine, both attached to a base, e.g., Schulz, R., Seidel, M., Egyptian Art. The Walters Art Museum, London, 2009, for a kneeling priest before a standing figure of Anubis.

CONDITION

VETTING:

TimeLine Auctions follows a vetting process to ensure the authenticity and legality of all items, reinforcing our commitment to integrity and responsible trading. Each antiquity, antique, and coin lot undergoes thorough examination by a vetting committee of at least ten external specialists, professional trade association members, scientists, and archaeologists: Our Vetting Process


AUCTIONS:

TimeLine is a leading auction house specialising in antiquities, ancient art, collectables, natural history, coins, medals, and books. Our auctions offer museums, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts the opportunity to acquire unique and historically significant pieces.

LOT 0479

Egyptian Bronze Statue of a Kneeling Priest

Estimate £300 - 400€350 - 460 (for guidance only)$410 - 540 (for guidance only)

Print page

RELATED LOTS

  • Egyptian Silver Cat Amulet
    Egyptian Silver Cat Amulet
    Late Period, 664-332 B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £260

    Modelled seated on a tongue-shaped base, with fur detailing and suspension loop to the back. 1.58 grams, 12 mm



    From an early 20th century collection.

    The cat was sacred to Bastet, a protective mother goddess and the daughter of the sun god Re. Amulets provided the wearer with the goddess's protection.

    Lot Details

  • Egypto-Phoenician Hardstone Scarab Group
    Egypto-Phoenician Hardstone Scarab Group
    Late 1st millennium B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £650

    Comprising five scarabs: one with a djed pillar surrounded by nwb signs; one with a jackal-headed Anubis holding a staff before a figure, with the scales of Maat above; one with a seated baboon sporting a crescent and sun disc headdress facing a royal cartouche of Thutmose III men-kheper-Re; one with a standing bird and other hieroglyphs; the largest one with worn underside. 1.97 grams total, 14-26 mm



    From an early 20th century Home Counties, UK, collection.

    The scarab, which represented the dung beetle, was the most popular amulet in ancient Egypt for approximately two thousand years until the Ptolemaic Period when it gradually fell out of favour. The popularity of scarabs extended beyond the borders of Egypt, and they were also distributed and produced in other regions, such as Phoenicia and Israel. The beetle is named khepri, derived from the verb 'to come into existence', and was considered the embodiment of the creator god Khepri, who was self-engendered. The ancient Egyptians mistakenly believed that the young beetle emerging from the dung ball was the result of an act of self-creation.

    Lot Details

  • Egyptian Multi-Stranded Mummy Bead Necklace
    Egyptian Multi-Stranded Mummy Bead Necklace
    Late Period, 664-525 B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £85

    Multi-stranded restrung composition necklace composed of beads of mainly annular and tubular types. 27 grams, 66 cm



    Acquired before 1979. From the private collection of Mr F. A., South Kensington, London, UK; thence by descent 2014.

    For thousands of years, artisans in Egypt created vibrant ceramics to echo the beauty of rare jewels. These ornaments were created with almost every material, colour, and texture imaginable and they come from across Egypt and beyond: vibrant blue lapis lazuli from Afghanistan, glossy black obsidian from Turkey, and aqua-green turquoise from the Sinai. They were worn in life and, after death, they served as precious ornamentation for mummies.

    Lot Details

Stay up-to-date with the latest from TimeLine Auctions by joining our mailing list