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censing
Title of the scene:
1jr.t snṯr n Ptḥ rsy jnb.f
Censing for Ptah Who is south of his wall
2jr.f dj ʿnḫ nb ḏ.t
he did being given all life forever
Dating:
Original: Thutmose III | Erasures: Amarna period (figure, name and epithets of Ptah) | Restorations: post-Amarna period (figure, name and epithets of Ptah)
Site:
Thebes: East Bank, Karnak, temple of Ptah, courtyard, north wall (KIU 253)
hypostyle hall
inner wall
Ptah (name and figure restored)
turned left, standing in the shrine with both arms extended forward and holding the was-sceptre and the djed-sceptre in both hands
tight-fitting cap, straight beard, enveloping mummiform garment with a stiff upper edge along the back of the neck
no requisites
was-sceptre with djed-sign
Thutmose III and his ka
Position of the officiant(s):
Thutmose III: turned right, striding with both arms extended forward and holding an incense pot in the left hand and pouring incense pellets into the pot with his right hand
royal ka: turned right, striding with the right arm lowered along the body holding the ankh-sign and an ostrich feather and holding a staff in the left hand
Costume of the officiant(s):
Thutmose III: khepresh-crown, wide necklace, loin-cloth with a triangular apron and a sporran-like ornament flanked by two uraei, belt, bull's tail
royal ka: Horus name in serekh on the ka-sign on its head, nemes-headdress, divine beard, wesekh-collar, plain loin-cloth, belt
incense pot
Bibliography:
- Biston-Moulin, Sébastien, Thiers, Christophe, Le temple de Ptah à Karnak 1. Relevé épigraphique, 2. Relevé photographique (Ptah, nos. 1–191), Bibliothèque générale 49, Le Caire 2016, 200-201 (vol. 1), 126, 136 (vol. 2), no. 138
- Legrain, George, Le temple de Ptah Rîs-anbou-f dans Thèbes (suite), Annales du Service des antiquités de l'Égypte III, 1902, 99
- Lepsius, Carl Richard, Denkmäler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien III. Text, Leipzig 1900, 7
- Moss, Rosalind L.B., Porter, Bertha, Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Reliefs, and Paintings II. Theban Temples, 2nd ed., Oxford 1972, 199-200 [15]
