An online magazine featuring articles about current archaeology and research into the art, literature, politics, warfare, entertainments, music, religion, cuisine and daily lives of inhabitants of the past other than those of the Greco-Roman period edited by a history enthusiast and technologist who is particularly interested in integrating technology and history education. For those who interacted with the Roman world, see "Roman Times."
They lived within a generation of each other, both men of the Theban elite, both buried during the remarkable century when Nubian kings from the kingdom of Kush ruled Egypt and made themselves the most ardent guardians of its classical past. Yet the coffins that housed Horankh and Padikhonsu on their journeys to the afterlife tell quietly different stories — not just about two individuals, but about the spectrum of Egyptian social reality beneath the grand archaizing program of the 25th Dynasty.
Horankh's coffin,that I photographed at the Dallas Museum of Art, is the more ambitious object. Fully anthropoid — sculpted to follow the contours of the mummy within — it presents a face rendered in the deliberate green of Osiris, Lord of the Underworld, with inlaid obsidian and calcite eyes that would allow the deceased's ba to witness the sunrise and participate in the solar cycle of regeneration. The plaited, upturned beard marks him not as a living man but as one already transformed into a divine being. The outer surface is restrained, almost austere — a conscious echo of Middle Kingdom models that the Kushite pharaohs promoted as the benchmark of theological and artistic purity. This was not poverty of decoration but a sophisticated visual argument: that Horankh, and the dynasty that shaped his world, stood in legitimate continuity with Egypt's greatest past. Technical documentation of the coffin, formerly available through the Michael C. Carlos Museum's Odyssey Online resource, recorded that it was built from native Egyptian wood with gaps between planks filled with mud — a practical solution rather than the imported Lebanese cedar used in the finest contemporary burials — though the bronze fittings, almost certainly imported, reflect a selective investment in prestige materials carrying both structural and symbolic weight. That Horankh could afford what was almost certainly a multi-coffin assemblage — with inner cases and possibly a cartonnage mummy board, each carrying its own protective imagery closer to the body — places him firmly among the elite, even if the construction of his outer coffin suggests he did not command its highest resources.
Coffin of a middle elite individual serving the 25th dynasty named Horankh photographed at the Dallas Museum of Art by Mary Harrsch.
Horankh himself remains somewhat enigmatic. The inscriptions on the base of his coffin give us his name and an invocation to Osiris, but no title or professional designation has been recorded — leaving his precise social role unresolved. The Osirian invocation might tempt an inference toward priestly connections, since devotion to Osiris was particularly intense among the Theban priesthood of the period. But Osirian funerary formulae were standard across the elite regardless of profession by the Late Period, and the formula alone cannot establish a priestly identity. Men at Horankh's apparent social level could equally have been mid-ranking priests, temple administrators, scribes, or civil officials — categories that were not always sharply separated in any case, since many administrative roles carried priestly dimensions. The coffin tells us where he stood in the social hierarchy with reasonable clarity; what he did within it remains an enigma.
Padikhonsu's coffin, excavated by Sir Robert Mond in 1905–1906 from a pit in the courtyard of the Theban tomb of User (TT 21) at el-Qurna and now in the Royal Ontario Museum, is also fully anthropoid, its surface carrying an ambitious painted program of figural registers, hieroglyphic text columns, and divine imagery running the full length of the body. The face is painted in the conventional red-brown flesh tone of Egyptian men rather than the theologically loaded green of Horankh — conventional portraiture rather than divine transformation. A broad painted collar evokes the wesekh necklace; a chaplet of water-lily petals encircles the crown.
Coffin of Padikhonsu, a lower ranked individual serving the 25th dynasty in Thebes. Image courtesy of the Royal Ontario Museum
Padikhonsu's coffin represents what scholars identify as the lower elite of Thebes — a social stratum that in the 25th Dynasty typically encompassed junior temple personnel such as wab priests (the most junior priestly rank, concerned primarily with ritual purity), chantresses and singers of Amun, minor scribes serving temple or state bureaucracies, and administrators of the considerable agricultural estates attached to Karnak's vast temple complex. Thebes was a city whose economic and social life orbited almost entirely around the cult of Amun-Re, and its temple employed a large staff across many ranks — the lower tiers of which represent exactly the social world Padikhonsu's burial suggests. It is even possible he worked within the Theban funerary industry itself, since coffin makers, embalmers, and necropolis workers formed hereditary occupational communities that fell at precisely this social level. Whatever his profession, his coffin tells us he was a man for whom a proper burial was achievable but whose resources did not extend to the multi-coffin assemblage that a man like Horankh could command — nor to commissioning the workshop's most skilled painters. The figural work, while iconographically complete, shows the simplified, somewhat hurried execution consistent with a lower-tier commission: divine figures rendered competently but without the crisp elegance of premium work, hieroglyphic columns that fulfill their ritual function without flourish.
Both coffins, in their different ways, participate in the Kushite archaizing program — each echoing Middle Kingdom conventions, each placing the deceased within the protective framework of Osirian theology. But their differences remind us that archaism was not a monolithic aesthetic handed down uniformly from above. It was a flexible visual language, adapted to circumstance, filtered through workshop traditions, and shaped by the economic realities of individual lives. The solemn green face of Horankh and the conventional red face of Padikhonsu are both products of the same dynasty, the same theological moment, the same Theban cultural world — and yet they speak, across twenty-seven centuries, of two men for whom the same gods, the same rituals, and the same funerary language could not quite conceal what the wood beneath the paint and the number of coffins revealed about the social distance between them.
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I've been watching the Great Courses lecture series "Ancient Civilizations of North America" presented by Dr. Edwin Barnhart. In it he discusses the achievements of the Mogollon culture of the North American southwest including the development of their distinctive black and white pottery found on the heads or covering the faces of their dead.
I photographed all of these Mimbres bowls, dated between 1000-1130 CE, at the Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas.
The bowls shown here belong to the Mimbres branch of the Mogollon culture (Hegmon and Nelson 2002, 2010). Produced in the Mimbres Valley of southwestern New Mexico between roughly 1000 and 1130 CE (Hegmon 2002; LeBlanc 1983) , these vessels are notable both for their refined geometric framing and for a varied repertoire of figural imagery, including rabbits, fish, turkeys, bighorn sheep, and human forms rendered with remarkable economy of line.
A defining feature of several bowls in this group is the presence of a deliberately punched perforation in the vessel's interior, commonly referred to as a "kill hole" (Robbins and Westmoreland 1991, 66; Hegmon et al. 2021, 28) . These holes were created through intentional, controlled breakage after the vessel's painted decoration was completed, and they appear with notable frequency on bowls recovered from burial contexts. Excavations at Mimbres sites have documented a consistent mortuary pattern in which such bowls were inverted and placed over the head or face of the deceased prior to interment (Shafer 1982, 2003; LeBlanc 1983) , typically within burial pits beneath the floors of residential rooms, reflecting the broader Southwestern practice of incorporating the dead into domestic space.
Examination of use-wear on recovered vessels has added a further dimension to this picture. Scrape marks and other wear patterns consistent with domestic use have been identified on the interior surfaces of some bowls subsequently placed in burials (Bray 1982; Lyle 1996; cited in Huston 2012, 17-18) , suggesting that these vessels were not produced solely for mortuary purposes but had served in household contexts, likely for food preparation or serving, prior to their incorporation into funerary ritual. This indicates that at least some bowls underwent a transformation in status, moving from everyday utilitarian objects into ritually significant items at the time of an individual's death, rather than being manufactured exclusively as grave goods. Such a pattern would suggest that the mortuary use of these vessels involved the repurposing of objects already embedded in the life of the household, potentially carrying personal or biographical associations with the deceased or their family.
The interpretive significance of the kill hole remains a subject of ongoing discussion among Southwestern archaeologists (Hegmon et al. 2021, 25-28) . Proposed explanations include the ritual "killing" or decommissioning of the vessel, thereby removing it from the realm of everyday use and marking its transition into a mortuary object; the symbolic release of a spirit, whether that of the vessel itself or of the deceased; and the physical termination of the bowl's "life cycle" as part of a broader Mimbres conceptual framework linking objects, individuals, and cosmological cycles. The evidence of prior domestic use lends some support to interpretations centered on biographical transformation and decommissioning, since these bowls appear to have had functional lives before their ritual repurposing, though these interpretations are not mutually exclusive, and the practice likely carried multiple, layered meanings that may have varied across communities and over time.
The practice invites comparison with object "killing" rituals documented in mortuary traditions across the world, including the deliberate bending or destruction of swords, helmets, and other weapons placed in graves in ancient Greek and broader Iron Age European contexts (Brody 2004, 2011; LeBlanc 1983) . While no historical connection exists between these traditions, the recurrence of such practices across unrelated societies suggests a broadly shared mortuary logic: that objects closely associated with an individual may need to be ritually decommissioned, removed from circulation among the living, or otherwise transformed at the point of burial. The specific mechanisms differ considerably, and some Mimbres specialists have questioned whether the term "kill hole" itself imports interpretive assumptions that may not align with Mimbres conceptual frameworks. Nonetheless, the cross-cultural recurrence of object destruction in funerary contexts points to a recurring concern in human mortuary practice more generally: the management of an object's relationship to its owner after death.
The figural imagery on these bowls offers further avenues for interpretation, though caution is warranted in moving from iconography to meaning. The geometric scroll and stepped-frame motifs that often encircle or border figural scenes have been read by some scholars as referencing migration narratives, directional symbolism, or cosmological structuring principles (Brody 2005; Hegmon 2002; Robbins and Westmoreland 1991, 67-70; Huston 2012, 73-78) , though such readings remain provisional. Bowls depicting human figures in unusual postures, including the tumbling or inverted forms seen on some examples, have prompted suggestions that these may represent supernatural beings, ancestral figures, or imagery specifically tied to themes of death and transformation, rather than depictions of ordinary lived experience.
The specific placement of these bowls over the head or face of the deceased has also prompted interpretive discussion, though this aspect of the practice remains less thoroughly addressed than the kill hole itself. Some scholars have suggested that this placement reflects the particular ritual significance of the head as a locus of identity, breath, or vital essence, drawing on patterns documented among later Puebloan peoples, who are generally understood to be culturally related to Mimbres populations (Brody 2004; Hegmon 2002; Huston 2012) . Under this reading, the inverted bowl may have functioned as an enclosure or boundary at an especially significant point of the body, with its painted interior, often featuring geometric framing devices that have been read as cosmological or directional in character, oriented toward the deceased rather than toward living viewers. The sequence of inversion, placement, and perforation has further been interpreted as a coherent ritual action, in which the enclosure created by the bowl was subsequently opened through the kill hole, potentially in connection with ideas about the release of breath or spirit at the site of the head. These interpretations rely substantially on ethnographic analogy with later and partly distinct Puebloan communities, a methodological approach, sometimes termed the direct historical approach, that is widely used but also debated in Southwestern archaeology, since it involves projecting documented practices backward onto earlier populations whose own symbolic frameworks cannot be directly accessed. The specific significance of head and face placement in Mimbres mortuary practice should therefore be regarded as plausible but inferential.
Pottery production itself was a labor-intensive process, generally attributed to Mimbres women, involving coil-and-scrape construction, application of mineral or organic paints with fine yucca-fiber brushes, and firing in a reducing (oxygen-restricted) atmosphere to produce the characteristic black-on-white surface (Brody 2005; Hegmon 2002; LeBlanc 1983) . The skill evident in these vessels, both in the painted compositions and in the technical control required to produce them, underscores their importance not merely as utilitarian objects but as significant cultural and ritual artifacts.
Bibliography
Brody, J. J. 2004. Mimbres Painted Pottery in the Modern World. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Brody, J. J. 2005. "Mimbres Painted Pottery: Meaning and Content." In The Archaeology of the Mimbres Region, edited by M. Hegmon, 45-62. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Bray, A. 1982. "Mimbres Black-on-White: A Ceramic Analysis." Master's thesis, University of Texas at Austin.
Hegmon, Michelle. 2002. "Recent Issues in the Archaeology of the Mimbres Region of the North American Southwest." Journal of Archaeological Research 10 (4): 307-357.
Hegmon, Michelle, and Margaret Nelson. 2010. "The Archaeology and Meaning of Mimbres." Archaeology Southwest Magazine 17 (4). Tucson: Archaeology Southwest.
Hegmon, Michelle, Will G. Russell, Kendall Baller, Matthew A. Peeples, and Sarah Striker. 2021. "The Social Significance of Mimbres Painted Pottery in the U.S. Southwest." American Antiquity 86 (1): 23-42.
Huston, Melyssa. 2012. "Metanarrative and Material Culture: A Visual Analysis of Mimbres Pottery and Jornada Rock Art." Master's thesis, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
LeBlanc, Steven A. 1983. The Mimbres People: Ancient Pueblo Painters of the American Southwest. London: Thames and Hudson.
Lyle, L. 1996. "Use-Wear Analysis of Mimbres Classic Black-on-White Bowls from the NAN Ranch Ruin." Paper presented at the 61st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, New Orleans.
Robbins, R. Robert, and Russell B. Westmoreland. 1991. "Astronomical Imagery and Numbers in Mimbres Pottery." The Astronomy Quarterly 8: 65-88.
Shafer, Harry J. 1982. "Classic Mimbres Phase Households and Room Use Patterns." KIVA 76 (2): 201-221.
Shafer, Harry J. 2003. Mimbres Archaeology at the NAN Ranch Ruin. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
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This paper argues that naturalistic infant representation in ancient Egyptian art functioned not as stylistic progress toward greater observational accuracy but as a strategic visual language activated in response to specific moments when dynastic continuity required materially legible affirmation. Through close analysis of a copper alloy statuette of Princess Sobeknakht suckling a prince (Dynasty 13, ca. 1700–after 1630 BCE; Brooklyn Museum, acc. no. 43.137) and a limestone nursing sculpture from the Sacred Animal Necropolis at Saqqara, the paper traces a pattern in which anatomical specificity in the rendering of the royal infant intensifies at moments when dynastic legitimacy requires embodied rather than purely symbolic assertion.
The Sobeknakht statuette, examined within the context of Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period political instability, demonstrates a degree of observational naturalism — in weight distribution, developmental specificity, and nursing posture — that temporarily displaces the divine archetype with biological immediacy, transforming the infant body into visual proof of lineal continuity.
This argument is situated within a broader survey of Egyptian infant representation from the Old Kingdom through the Amarna period, post-Amarna recalibration, and Ramesside formalization, demonstrating that naturalism and schematic convention operated as distinct registers deployed according to ideological circumstance rather than as successive stages of artistic development.
The paper further challenges the conventional identification of the Saqqara nursing sculpture as the historical wet nurse Maia with Tutankhamun, presenting convergent iconographic, archaeological, and stylistic evidence in support of Emery's original identification of the figures as Isis nursing Horus-Osiris. The sculpture derives from a cultic depositional context, and the female figure’s hairstyle diverges from Maia’s established personal iconographic conventions. In addition, a gilded bronze Isis nursing Horus bearing an identical wig type was recovered from the same archaeological assemblage. Together, these factors — the cultic depositional context, the divergence of the female figure’s hairstyle from Maia’s established iconographic conventions, and the recovery from the same assemblage of a gilded bronze Isis nursing Horus bearing an identical wig type — point to a 30th Dynasty or later date, situating the sculpture within the political and theological program of a native Egyptian dynasty reasserting cultural legitimacy after centuries of foreign rule.
Infant naturalism thus emerges across Egyptian history not as teleological progress but as ideological instrument — an embodied argument for the survival of kingship.
Introduction
The representation of children in ancient Egyptian art has
often been treated as iconographically secondary to royal portraiture, divine
imagery, or elite self-representation. Yet when examined across historical
periods, depictions of infants and young children reveal a consistent, if often
understated, response to political and theological pressure. Anatomical
treatment, gestural animation, and relational dynamics shift in correlation
with moments of dynastic instability or changing political and religious
priorities. This pattern does not operate uniformly across all periods or
media, but emerges most clearly where dynastic transmission or theological
legitimacy is materially contested.
The copper statue of Princess Sobeknakht from the late 13th
Dynasty, that I photographed at the Brooklyn Museum in New York, provides a
pivotal case study for exploring this phenomenon.
Figure 1.Copper statuette of Princess Sobeknakht suckling a prince, Late Middle Kingdom to Second Intermediate Period, c. 1700–after 1630 BCE. Brooklyn Museum, New York. Accession No. 43.137. Photograph by the author.
Old Kingdom Stability and Schematic Infancy
A non-royal nursing sculpture from the Old Kingdom (c.
2686–2181 BCE) reveals a dimension of Egyptian artistic practice that
fundamentally clarifies the ideological significance of royal infant
naturalism. The sculpture renders the nursing infant with convincing
observational specificity—rounded head, soft body, and physically convincing
posture—demonstrating that Egyptian sculptors possessed the capacity for infant
naturalism from at least the Old Kingdom onward (see Fig. 2)
Figure 2.Nursing woman, Dynasty 5, reign of Niuserre or later, ca. 2420–2389 BCE or later. Limestone with paint traces, H. 10.5 cm. Probably from the Tomb of Nikauinpu, Giza. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Object No. 26.7.1405. Purchase, Edward S. Harkness Gift, 1926.
The schematic treatment of royal infants in the same
period therefore reflects not artistic limitation but a deliberate
theological choice. As Kozloff and Bryan (1992) observe, royal nursing scenes
operating within the Isis-Horus theological framework required the infant to
embody the divine Horus rather than a specific observed child—naturalism
would have undermined the theological argument by grounding the divine child
in contingent biological reality rather than eternal symbolic identity.
Accordingly, in the Old Kingdom, royal children are
typically depicted as miniaturized adults, identifiable by the sidelock of
youth but lacking infantile proportions (Robins, 1997). Reliefs emphasize
genealogy rather than developmental specificity. The child’s function is
symbolic continuity rather than biological immediacy.
This convention corresponds to a period of relative dynastic
stability in the 4th and 5th Dynasties (Kemp, 2018). Where succession is
secure, symbolic representation suffices; anatomical insistence is unnecessary.
This is clearly reflected in an alabaster statue of Queen Ankhnes-meryre II and
Her Son, Pepy II (Brooklyn Museum, New York) dated between 2288–2224 or 2194
BCE.
Figure 3.Alabaster statue of Queen Ankhnes-meryre II and her son, Pepy II, dated between 2288–2224 or 2194 BCE. Brooklyn Museum, New York. Accession No. 39.119.
Despite his physical position on his mother's lap, Pepy II
is rendered not as an infant but as a small king: his proportions are those of
an adult, his head bears the nemes headdress of reigning pharaohs, and his feet
rest grounded on the base, conveying physical stability rather than infantile
dependence. His gaze is directed laterally rather than toward his mother or the
viewer—there is no mutual engagement between the figures, no inward orientation
of the kind that will later characterize the Sobeknakht infant's turn toward
the breast. The queen's left hand supports his back, maintaining his upright,
autonomous posture rather than drawing him into the maternal body in an act of
nourishment; she stabilizes his kingship rather than sustains his biology. Most
striking is the placement of the child's left hand over the queen's. This
gestural detail encodes the constitutional logic of the regency with unusual
precision. Ankhnes-meryre II governed as regent on behalf of a king too young
to rule independently; the composition renders this arrangement spatially. Her
hand acts; his hand ratifies. The maternal body provides the practical
custodianship of royal authority while the child's hand above hers marks the
ultimate source from which that authority derives. The mother is throne,
regent, and instrument simultaneously. Her body is the seat of kingship, her
hand its executor, and his hand its legitimizing seal.
The contrast with the Sobeknakht statue is instructive
precisely because both compositions employ the same gesture. In the Sobeknakht
statue the infant's hand overlaps the mother's at the breast—an observed
behavioral detail, the grasping reflex of a nursing infant recorded with
developmental specificity. The gesture is biological before it is symbolic. In
the Ankhnes-meryre statue the child's hand overlaps the queen's in an entirely
different register: not grasping but ratifying, not dependent but authorizing.
The same compositional element—one small hand placed over a larger one—carries
opposite meanings in the two objects, and the difference maps exactly onto the
distinction this paper has traced between embodied naturalism and symbolic
investiture. Where the Sobeknakht sculptor looked at a mother and infant and
recorded what hands do, the Ankhnes-meryre sculptor used hands to render what
kingship is.
Middle Kingdom Restoration and Embodied Authority
Following the First Intermediate Period, Middle Kingdom
rulers emphasized legitimacy through heightened realism in royal portraiture
(Baines, 1985). Careworn features and individualized physiognomies signal an
ideological investment in embodied kingship.
Late Middle Kingdom Instability and Embodied Continuity
The copper sculpture of Princess Sobeknakht belongs to the waning phase of the
Middle Kingdom of Egypt and anticipates the fragmentation of the Second
Intermediate Period (Allen, 2015; Grajetzki, 2006).
The late 13th Dynasty was characterized by rapid succession
and diminishing central authority (Allen, 2015). Within such a climate,
biological continuity required visual reinforcement. In this sculpture, the
adult female conforms to Middle Kingdom canonical ideals: idealized
physiognomy, frontal composure, and restrained musculature. Even though this
small sculpture bears an inscription stating the subject's name, such
representation privileges office and status over individual portraiture
(Robins, 1997).
In contrast, the infant exhibits subtle volumetric modeling
and convincing corporeality facilitated by the malleable copper alloy medium.
The rounded head with molded wisps of hair and more proportional body geometry
diverges from earlier schematic reductions of children as scaled-down adults.
The infant’s weight is integrated into the mother’s pose, suggesting
observational attention to age-specific anatomy. The most striking feature of
the sculpture is the spatial relationship between mother and child.
Compositional Integration and Maternal Enclosure
Rather than sitting independently, the infant’s body
is physically integrated into the maternal form. The child’s torso presses
against the mother’s body, his legs supported by her bent thigh, while the
mother’s right hand presents the breast and the infant’s hand overlaps it. This
arrangement produces what may be described as a triangular enclosure formed by
pelvis, hand, and breast. It is composed of pelvic support from the mother’s
lap, manual contact at the breast, and the inward orientation of the infant’s
head and torso.
Egyptian sculpture often relies on triangular massing to
ensure structural stability, but here the triangular arrangement functions at
the level of maternal interaction, visually enclosing the infant within a
protective framework created by the mother’s body.
The infant’s body does not simply rest beside the mother but
appears almost subsumed within her bodily space, creating an image of
biological continuity. This compositional strategy differs markedly from Old
Kingdom family imagery, where children typically appear as miniature figures
standing beside the parent (Robins, 1993). In the Sobeknakht statue the child
instead occupies a position within the maternal structure, emphasizing
dependence and protection.
Another rarely discussed compositional feature further
suggests that the infant may represent a future royal figure rather than simply
a generic child.
Axial Placement and Royal Centrality
The infant’s body is positioned on the central axis of
the statue, aligned vertically with the mother’s torso and framed by the
triangular configuration formed by her arm and bent leg. Egyptian sculptural
programs frequently reserve the central axis for the figure of highest status
in a composition (Russmann, 2001).
The infant is physically smaller. Yet the axial alignment
subtly places him at the symbolic center of the composition. The mother,
with her uraeus-embellished diadem, functions structurally as the framework
that protects and presents this central figure and provides his royal
legitimacy. Such an arrangement may allude to the political and ideological
importance of royal birth, in which the mother’s body becomes the medium
through which kingship is renewed.
Once a prince became king, his mother acquired exceptional
prestige within the court, embodying royal succession and legitimacy
(Troy, 1986). Maternal imagery therefore had the potential to convey political
meaning even when presented in intimate domestic form.
The statue also displays unusual attention to infant
physiology.
Developmental Naturalism and Observed Infant Behavior
The child turns toward the mother’s breast, his torso
angled inward and his hand placed over the mother’s hand that offers the
breast. This gesture suggests an observed nursing interaction rather than a
purely symbolic motif. Egyptian representations of children typically employ
conventional markers such as the sidelock of youth or the finger-to-mouth
gesture. Here, however, the sculptor appears to depict an infant at a specific
developmental stage—capable of grasping but not yet able to sit
independently consistent with observed developmental stages in early
infancy.
Such naturalistic attention to infant behavior remains
relatively rare in Egyptian art and contributes to the statue’s exceptional
status within the corpus of Middle Kingdom sculpture. This fusion of
maternal enclosure and dynastic meaning invites comparison with later
representations of Isis nursing Horus, though the two traditions differ in ways
that sharpen what is distinctive about the Sobeknakht statue
Relationship to Later Isis Lactans Imagery
Despite the thematic similarity, the spatial relationships
differ significantly. In Isis lactans imagery the child typically sits upright
on the goddess’s lap with his body fully visible and clearly separated from
hers. The composition therefore presents two distinct figures engaged in a
symbolic act of divine nourishment. Such images become widespread from the Late
Period onward and ultimately influence Mediterranean and early Christian
iconography (Pinch, 2002).
The Sobeknakht statue, by contrast, emphasizes fusion
rather than separation. The infant’s body merges with the maternal form,
visually reinforcing the concept that royal life originates within and remains
dependent upon the mother. Rather than presenting the child to the viewer, the
composition creates an inward-focused maternal enclosure.
This distinction reflects differing theological priorities.
Later Isis lactans imagery emphasizes Horus as a distinct divine being whose
legitimacy derives from divine parentage. The Middle Kingdom statue instead
stresses biological continuity and maternal protection, concepts
particularly resonant in periods when dynastic succession could be uncertain.
The late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period
witnessed increasing political fragmentation and shorter royal reigns. In such
contexts, visual emphasis on maternal lineage may have carried ideological
weight. Royal women were closely associated with the perpetuation of the
dynasty, and the birth of an heir represented the renewal of kingship itself
(Troy, 1986).
The Sobeknakht statue therefore operates on several levels
simultaneously. At the most immediate level it depicts a nursing mother and
infant with remarkable sensitivity to developmental behavior. At a symbolic
level the composition creates a protective triangular enclosure, visually
articulating the role of maternal care in sustaining new life. At the
ideological level the central placement of the infant within this maternal
structure subtly evokes the political significance of royal birth.
Through these combined strategies, the sculpture transforms
an intimate domestic scene into a statement about dynastic continuity and
the embodied origins of kingship.
The infant body becomes tangible evidence of dynastic
viability. As Assmann (2001) has argued, Egyptian kingship depended on the
visible perpetuation of maat through lineage; the embodied heir functions as
political theology made flesh.
The Second Intermediate Period: Fragmented Production
During the Second Intermediate Period, regional division and
reduced centralized patronage limit monumental production (Grajetzki, 2006).
Infant imagery becomes sparse, reflecting institutional fragmentation rather
than conceptual retreat. The absence of elaborated infant naturalism
underscores its dependence on centralized workshop systems.
New Kingdom: Emphasis on ordered relationships
A New Kingdom milk vessel depicting a seated mother nursing
an infant provides a useful example of sculptural production reflecting a
deliberate return to visual strategies that emphasized stability, archetypal
roles, and symbolic clarity after the political fragmentation of the
preceding Second Intermediate Period. Although the subject derives from a
natural maternal act, the composition transforms the scene into a schematic and
integrated form. Human figures were rendered as idealized participants in enduring
social and cosmic relationships rather than as psychologically distinct
individuals.
Figure 4.Milk vessel depicting a seated mother nursing an infant, New Kingdom, 18th Dynasty (ca. 1550–1295 BCE). Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung (Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection), Berlin, Germany. ÄM 14476.
The kneeling body of the mother forms a compact base from
which the vessel rises vertically behind the head, while the child is not
modeled as an independent figure but pressed closely against the mother’s
torso. This sculptural integration eliminates spatial separation between the
figures and produces a closed composition in which mother, child, and container
function as a single volumetric unit. The resulting stability of form is not
merely structural; it conveys an aesthetic preference for visual cohesion and
permanence that characterizes much New Kingdom statuary.
Equally significant is the emotional restraint of the
figures. Although the infant straddles the mother’s waist in a position that
would ordinarily imply intimate interaction, neither figure directs its gaze
toward the other. Both faces instead conform to the calm, outward orientation
typical of formal Egyptian statuary. This absence of mutual engagement removes
the scene from the realm of narrative observation and situates it within a
symbolic register. The figures do not depict a specific mother and child but
instead represent archetypal roles: maternal nurturer and dependent offspring.
Even the sidelock of youth on the child, an iconographic marker commonly
associated with youthful forms of Horus and royal heirs, serves not as a
literal identification but as a broader signal of continuity and rightful
succession.
The vessel’s functional context reinforces this symbolic
reading. As a container for milk, the object materially embodies the act
represented in its sculptural imagery. The nourishment provided by the mother
is conceptually mirrored in the substance contained within the vessel, creating
a unified visual and functional metaphor for sustenance, regeneration, and
continuity. Such conceptual integration between form, function, and iconography
appears frequently in early New Kingdom decorative arts and suggests a broader
cultural emphasis on ordered relationships—between parent and child, ruler and
successor, and, by extension, society and cosmic order (maʿat).
Seen within this broader context, the milk vessel
illustrates how 18th Dynasty artists translated everyday imagery into a visual
language of stability and symbolic permanence. Naturalistic elements—such as
the child’s straddling posture and the mother’s supporting arm—remain present,
yet they are subordinated to compositional unity and emotional restraint. This
balance between observation and idealization would later be pushed toward
greater expressive freedom during the reign of Akhenaten and the
artistic experimentation of the Amarna Period, when gestures and familial
interactions became markedly more animated.
Amarna: Gestural Naturalism and Theological
Centralization
Under Akhenaten at Amarna, child imagery becomes
hyper-visible (Kemp, 2012; Robins, 1993). Royal daughters are depicted with
cranial elongation and attenuated limbs, departing from proportional
naturalism. Yet gestural realism intensifies: children squirm, grasp, lean, and
interact intimately with their parents. This shift corresponds to theological
restructuring. The royal family becomes the exclusive intermediary of the
Aten’s life force (Assmann, 2001). Fertility and vitality must be continuously
displayed. Here, anatomical distortion coexists with behavioral naturalism. The
child’s animated body affirms both continuity of kingship and cosmological
centrality.
The sculpted quartzite head of a princess (Neues Museum,
Berlin) from an Amarna workshop operates at the level of type. Detached
from narrative context, it distills the Amarna royal child into a set of
morphological features: the dramatically elongated cranium, the softly modeled
facial plane, the attenuated neck. These features were not the product of
individual observation but of workshop standardization. The quantity of
comparable heads recovered from the Amarna sculptors' quarter indicates
systematic production of idealized templates, circulated as authoritative
models (Kemp, 2012). The child's body, in this register, functions as a sign—a
stable visual vocabulary legible across media and scales, from monumental
relief to intimate amulet.
Figure 5.Quartzite head of a princess from an Amarna workshop, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1345 BCE. Neues Museum, Berlin. ÄM 21223. Photograph by the author.
A household stele depicting Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and their
daughters operates at the level of scene. Here the standardized
body-type is animated, embedded in enacted theological drama. One daughter
reaches toward Akhenaten's face; another rests across Nefertiti's knee; a third
stands freely between the enthroned parents. These are postures without precedent
in pre-Amarna royal iconography, where children, when depicted at all, appear
as miniaturized adults in frontal rigidity. The informality is compositionally
deliberate: the children's gestures generate the visual energy of the scene,
drawing the eye inward toward the family unit. Crucially, the Aten's
rays—terminating in ankh-bearing hands—descend not onto royal regalia or
cult equipment but onto the bodies of the children themselves. The youngest
generation is incorporated into the divine circuit as necessary receivers:
vitality must be shown flowing through them, not merely toward the king.
The relationship between type and scene is not incidental.
Amarna child imagery required both poles to function as a theological argument.
The type—the elongated, unmistakable body—ensured that the children were
instantly legible as royal and as cosmologically marked, regardless of scale or
medium. The scene—the gesturing, reaching, held body—demonstrated that
this marked body was also a living conduit, actively participating in the
circulation of the Aten's life force. Anatomical distortion established the
child's identity; behavioral animation established the child's function.
This dual operation also helps account for what might
otherwise appear as a contradiction in the Amarna program: the simultaneous
departure from proportional naturalism and intensification of gestural realism
noted by Robins (1993). These are not competing impulses uneasily combined.
They are coordinated strategies serving distinct representational ends. The
distorted body-type signals cosmological status; the naturalistic gesture
signals cosmological activity. Together they constitute a complete theological
proposition. The royal daughters are both marked by the Aten's favor and
instruments of its transmission.
The household stele format in which the scene appears
reinforces this reading. These objects were produced for domestic
contexts—private chapels and household niches—rather than for official temple
programs (Assmann, 2001). Their audience was not the priestly establishment but
the administrative and artisan classes of Amarna itself. That the theological
argument encoded in royal child imagery was disseminated into domestic space
suggests that its function extended beyond dynastic display. It structured the devotional
life of the city's population, positioning the royal family—children
included—as the necessary mediators through whom any private relationship with
the Aten had to pass.
The Amarna case thus conforms to the broader pattern this
paper has traced across Egyptian dynastic history, while sharpening its terms.
At the late 13th Dynasty, the Sobeknakht statue responded to political
fragmentation by grounding legitimacy in the observable body of a specific
infant—weight-bearing, grasping, biologically present. At Amarna, the
conditions differ but the underlying logic does not. Theological isolation
replaces political fragmentation; the royal daughters replace the anonymous
nursing infant; the household stele and the workshop head replace the intimate
copper figure. Yet in each case the animated child body is deployed as evidence
rather than emblem—proof of vitality where vitality is in question.
What distinguishes the Amarna instance is the systematic
scale of that deployment. Where the Sobeknakht statue represents a single,
exceptional object produced at a moment of institutional stress, Amarna child
imagery was a centrally organized visual program, disseminated across media and
domestic contexts throughout the city. The argument encoded in the naturalistic
heir was not confined to a single votive object but repeated, standardized, and
circulated—suggesting that the ideological pressure requiring embodied
demonstration was correspondingly more acute and more broadly felt.
This scalar difference is itself significant. When
succession was uncertain in the late Middle Kingdom, embodied naturalism
appeared selectively, in objects produced for intimate viewing. When the entire
theological order was restructured under Akhenaten—the old gods suppressed, the
priestly establishment displaced, the royal family installed as the sole
conduit of divine favor—the naturalistic child body became not a private
argument but a public one, pressed into every household altar and workshop model
the city produced. The greater the instability, the more widely the embodied
heir had to circulate.
Post-Amarna Recalibration
Under Tutankhamun and Horemheb, canonical proportions
reassert themselves (Kemp, 2018; Russmann, 2001). Cranial exaggerations recede
and muscular definition returns, signaling a deliberate retreat from Amarna’s
anatomical experimentation. Yet a residual sensitivity to age differentiation
persists, indicating selective retention rather than wholesale rejection of
Amarna innovations.
A relief depicting the coordinated transport of a ceremonial
structure provides a compelling example of how post-Amarna artists selectively
retained and recalibrated late 18th Dynasty naturalism. This scene departs from
earlier New Kingdom conventions in its emphasis on functional movement and anatomical
responsiveness.
Figure 7.Coordinated transport of a ceremonial structure, from the Memphite tomb of Horemheb at Saqqara (1332–1323 BCE). Museo Civico Archeologico, Bologna. Inventory No. MCA-EGI-EG_1889. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Sailko.
Rather than presenting the figures as static, idealized
repetitions, the sculptor introduces subtle variation among the figures. The
porters’ strides alternate convincingly, their torsos incline forward under the
implied weight, and their raised arms exhibit nuanced differences in
articulation. These adjustments produce a sense of shared physical effort—an
effect rarely pursued with such consistency in pre-Amarna relief.
Equally significant is the treatment of the body itself.
Musculature is modeled with restraint but clear observational intent: pectorals
are softly contoured, abdomens register compression and extension, and the
transition between shoulder and arm conveys plausible structural tension. This
is not the exaggerated corporeality of Amarna royal imagery, but a moderated
naturalism—one that acknowledges the mechanics of the human body without
abandoning established ideals of proportion and clarity.
Attention to secondary elements reinforces this effect. The
pleated kilts respond dynamically to movement, flaring and shifting with each
stride, while slight variations in head angle and gaze introduce individualized
expression in an otherwise conventional compositional scheme. These
“micro-gestures” suggest a growing interest in situational realism, even within
the enduring framework of composite representation.
What emerges is a carefully balanced aesthetic: the
reintroduction of naturalistic observation, tempered by the reassertion of
traditional visual order. In this sense, the relief does not signal a rupture
from the past, but rather a controlled synthesis—one that integrates the
experimental legacy of the Amarna period into a stabilized post-Amarna artistic
language.
The very systematization that made Amarna child imagery so
ideologically powerful also made its dismantling legible as a political act.
When Tutankhamun’s court initiated the restoration of traditional religious and
artistic conventions, the withdrawal of gestural naturalism, the reintegration
of canonical proportions, the restoration of musculature, and the suppression
of cranial elongation in royal imagery collectively announced that the
theological experiment had ended.
If naturalism were simply a stylistic preference or an index
of artistic skill, we would expect it to persist or develop further after
Amarna—accumulated observational knowledge rarely disappears from a workshop
tradition without cause. That it retreats instead, and retreats rapidly, under
conditions of deliberate political and theological restoration, indicates that
its presence had never been incidental. It was load-bearing.
The selective retention of age-differentiation sensitivity
in post-Amarna work suggests that the recalibration was not a total erasure.
Certain Amarna innovations—a residual attention to the specificity of the young
body—persist beneath the restored canonical surface. This remainder is itself
informative: it marks the boundary between what had been ideologically
instrumental and what, through repeated practice, had become embedded in
artistic perception. The argument receded; the observation was absorbed.
This calibrated balance between observation and convention,
while visually coherent, can blur iconographic boundaries, creating
conditions in which long-held identifications warrant reconsideration. The
following case study extends the argument into the Late Period, where
naturalism operates within a different, though related, theological framework.
Rethinking the Maia-Tutankhamun Sculpture: Iconography,
Context, and Theological Function
A limestone sculpture conventionally identified as the royal
nurse Maia with Tutankhamun, recovered by W.B. Emery in 1968, presents at first
glance a familiar maternal scene—a kneeling female figure supporting a small
child on her right knee, her left hand cradling his head while he rests on
cushions with his feet on a footstool decorated with prone prisoner figures.
The child wears a winged scarab necklace and his abdomen is soft and rounded,
retaining the naturalistic attention to infant physiology that recalls Amarna
sensibilities. Neither figure bears the cranial elongation characteristic of
Amarna royal imagery, though, suggesting production after the formal
abandonment of that style.
Figure 8.Limestone sculpture recovered by W. B. Emery in 1968, originally identified as Isis nursing Horus and later reconsidered as the royal nurse Maia with Tutankhamun following the discovery of Maia’s tomb near the same archaeological site. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Image courtesy of the Egyptian Museum.
Although the kneeling posture diverges from the canonical seated or standing formats of Late Period Isis lactans imagery, such deviation does not preclude a Saite votive context. Rather, it situates the sculpture within a more flexible votive and theological register in which divine roles could be recombined. This kind of hybridization, in which roles are merged and temporal states collapsed, is characteristic of Late Period visual theology. The figure does not reproduce a standardized cult image of Isis but instead mobilizes her maternal and funerary functions in a localized, hybridized form.
Van Dijk (2010) associates the child’s rounded abdomen and
the black outlining of eyes and eyebrows with Amarna-style naturalism. However,
comparable features appear in earlier Egyptian art. Rounded infantile forms are
attested as early as the Middle Kingdom as previously discussed, demonstrating
that such naturalistic attention to the body was not unique to the late 18th
Dynasty. Likewise, the delineation of eyes and eyebrows in black, often
producing the characteristic almond-shaped contour, is already fully
established in Old Kingdom relief, as seen in the limestone depiction of Iry
from Giza (4th Dynasty; British Museum, EA1168). These features belong to a
long-standing canonical vocabulary whose modulation, rather than mere presence,
carries chronological significance. Positioned within this broader framework,
the naturalistic details of the Saqqara sculpture are better understood as a
contextually driven reactivation of established visual conventions, consistent
with broader patterns in which heightened naturalism reemerges during periods
of ideological and political realignment.
Figure 9.Limestone relief of Iry, who held titles such as “King’s Priest” and scribe, Old Kingdom, 4th Dynasty, ca. 2613–2494 BCE. Tomb of Iry, Giza. British Museum. EA 1168.
Upon closer inspection, however, the composition accumulates
iconographic details that resist a straightforward nursing reading and point
instead toward funerary and Osirian associations. The child's scale relative to
the female figure suggests a young child of perhaps one to three years rather
than a nursing infant. The sidelock of youth, clearly visible on the right side
of the head in period photography of the sculpture (Hastings & Smith,
1997), confirms both his royal status and his depiction at a developmental
stage beyond infancy—a child old enough to have grown and dressed hair. This
detail creates a pointed iconographic tension with the head-cradling support
gesture of the female figure, which is developmentally appropriate only for a
newborn whose neck muscles cannot yet support independent head control. A
naturalistic reading cannot reconcile these elements. The child is old enough
to wear a royal sidelock, yet the head-support gesture is appropriate only for
a newborn. The juxtaposition is therefore deliberate. The sculptor has combined
markers of two developmental stages into a composite image operating outside
naturalistic convention. The head-cradling gesture, in turn, more closely
echoes the funerary support of Isis and Nephthys attending the supine Osiris in
embalming and resurrection imagery than any observed maternal behavior.
Most strikingly, the child's arms are crossed over his
chest—a gesture inseparable from Osirian funerary ideology—entirely incongruous
with any living nursing interaction. Neither figure engages the other in mutual
gaze; both orient outward in the formal composure of official or votive
statuary, removing the scene from the realm of observed domestic interaction.
Figure 10.Close-up of a child with arms crossed over the chest, reflecting Osirian funerary iconography. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Image courtesy of the Egyptian Museum.
The sculpture’s findspot, confirmed by the Cairo Museum
accession record (JE 91301), is the North Serapeum Group at Saqqara, within the
precinct of the Temple of Nectanebo II (Emery, 1971)—a Late Period complex
associated with the Apis cult and Osirian regeneration theology. This context
is thematically consistent with the sculpture’s funerary and Osirian
iconography.
Emery himself noted that he had anticipated encountering a
shrine to Isis within this sector of the Saqqara necropolis. Although no
discrete shrine structure was ultimately identified, the recovery of an almost
life-sized limestone group that he initially interpreted as Isis nursing Horus
is consistent with the presence of Isis-oriented cult activity within the
complex. While this expectation cannot independently determine the sculpture’s
identity, it provides an additional layer of contextual support for interpreting
the group within an Isiac and Osirian theological framework.
Emery’s excavation records place the object within a Late
Period cultic environment, including Demotic inscriptions, deposits of
mummified baboons sacred to Thoth and Imhotep, and reused funerary materials
bearing Carian inscriptions associated with Saite-period mercenary communities.
Although an earlier “Third Dynasty” substructure was incorporated into the
complex, this represents a residual phase rather than the primary context of
use. The evidence indicates sustained activity during the first millennium BCE,
making it more plausible that the sculpture belongs to this later cultic
horizon than that it is a displaced New Kingdom object. Whether the sculpture
was originally deposited in this specific context or relocated during
subsequent reorganizations of the Saqqara necropolis—as Hastings and Smith
(1997) have speculated—its association with a site dedicated to divine
resurrection and eternal regeneration remains fully consistent with the
funerary and commemorative reading proposed here.
Such a context—centered on animal cults, divine
intercession, and regenerative theology—provides an ideal setting for a
composite Horus–Osiris image sustained by a divine mother.
The sculpture’s near life-size scale underscores its significance beyond a
typical tomb object. The female figure’s head exhibits extensive damage in the
area where Isis attributes—such as plaits and headdress—would have been
located. Other votive objects deposited within the same Late-to-Ptolemaic
context similarly bear evidence of disturbance, likely reflecting deliberate
iconoclastic action during periods of religious transition. This damage, rather
than undermining the sculpture’s identity, reinforces the interpretation of the
figure as a divine mother: the attributes targeted for removal correspond to
her Isis identity, highlighting the work’s original theological function within
a cultic votive framework.
A fragmentary dedicatory inscription on the sculpture,
transcribed by Van Dijk (2010), identifies the female figure by role rather
than by name, addressing the ka of the “Great Nurse of the King of Upper and
Lower Egypt,” while the names of both dedicatees are lost to damage. Although
this title has traditionally been understood to indicate a royal nursing
context, it does not in itself establish the identity of a specific historical
individual.
More significantly, both figures bear the epithet maa
kheru (“justified”), signaling their posthumous Osirian vindication
and complicating the conventional reading of the group as a living royal child
with his nurse. At the same time, the use of royal titulary is not restricted
to historical kingship; as observed by Richard H. Wilkinson, both Horus and
Osiris may be designated “King of Upper and Lower Egypt” within theological
contexts. In this light, the “Great Nurse” may be understood as a functional or
archetypal designation aligning with Isis in her role as divine nurturer, while
the royal child—particularly if read in conjunction with Osirian attributes—may
embody a Horus–Osiris identity consistent with Late Period formulations of
regenerative kingship. The inscription thus reinforces the sculpture’s
commemorative and funerary character while shifting the burden of
identification away from historical biography toward theological and
iconographic interpretation.
Furthermore, the Late Period sculpture introduces a marked
tension within established representational hierarchies by placing a child
bearing full royal regalia on a nurse’s lap—a posture typically associated with
dependent royal infancy rather than figures marked as active kings. Egyptian
nursing imagery conventionally situates the royal child within a framework of
dependency compatible with non-sovereign status; a nurse or divine mother
holding an infant conforms to this visual logic. Rare exceptions—such as the
relief of Maia, which depicts the child with the khepresh crown—demonstrate
that royal insignia may appear within a nurturing context, yet these images
maintain a developmental framework in which kingship remains emergent rather
than fully actualized. Here, however, that framework is deliberately
destabilized. The child bears attributes of active kingship—the prisoner
footstool and winged scarab pectoral, signaling conquest and royal
authority—while simultaneously adopting funerary and theological gestures,
including crossed arms and the head-support posture, marking a merged
Horus–Osiris identity widely attested in Late Period theological formulations.
This juxtaposition of infantilized body and sovereign
regalia produces a controlled contradiction: the figure is at once dependent
and authoritative. Rather than representing a living king, the image
articulates a theological construct in which kingship is understood as
regenerative and transhistorical. The apparent inversion of representational
norms is thus not incidental but instrumental, enabling the fusion of
child-ruler and Osirian sovereign into a single composite form.
The reduction of the royal figure to child scale carries
further theological implications. Standard Osirian funerary imagery typically
presents the deceased as a fully adult male assimilated to the mature god. By
contrast, the child form foregrounds not biological age but a condition of
perpetual renewal, in which the king exists within an ongoing cycle of divine
sustenance. The tension between vulnerability and domination—visually encoded
in the juxtaposition of infantile form and conquest imagery—therefore becomes
the mechanism through which this regenerative model of kingship is expressed.
A strictly historical reading struggles to reconcile these
elements simultaneously. The scalar infantilization, the head-support gesture,
the crossed arms, the absent mutual gaze, and the royal conquest imagery
collectively indicate a posthumous or divine votive purpose. Read in this
light, the work’s apparent naturalism—previously characterized as anomalous—may
instead be understood as part of a broader Late Period pattern in which
heightened naturalistic expression reemerges under conditions of political and ideological
instability, including the fragmented rule of competing dynasties and
successive phases of Kushite, Assyrian, and Persian domination. Within this
context, naturalism functions not as mere observation but as a vehicle for
theological synthesis.
The conventional identification of the female figure as Maia
may therefore require reconsideration. The sculpture’s deposition within the
Saqqara animal necropolis—rather than within Maia’s tomb—aligns more closely
with votive or cultic practice than with private commemorative sculpture. Given
the density of the necropolis and the mobility of objects within it, proximity
alone cannot establish identification.
The tomb relief of Maia at Saqqara, while distinct in
composition from the sculpture, shares its fundamental theological
representation. The relief depicts a near-adult king wearing the khepresh
crown—an emblem of active royal and warrior identity—seated on Maia's lap in a
posture of infantile dependence entirely inconsistent with court protocol
governing any living scene. That a crowned near-adult pharaoh should be
depicted on a woman's lap inverts normal scale and hierarchical relationships
so deliberately that a literal courtly reading becomes highly implausible. Both
compositions appear to make the same theological argument through different
visual means: the deceased king, however mature his royal identity, is received
back into protective maternal care in death.
In the absence of inscriptional confirmation, identification must rest on converging iconographic and contextual probabilities rather than singular diagnostic features.
In the reliefs of her tomb, Maia is consistently depicted with a wig secured by a single band and finished with a fringed lower edge. The female figure in the sculpture bears a markedly different hairstyle, with multiple bands and elaborate plaiting without a lower fringe. Given the strong
tendency toward consistency in elite self-representation within a single tomb program, this discrepancy constitutes strong iconographic evidence against identifying the sculpture's female figure as Maia. The fringed wig worn by elite women of the late 18th Dynasty is well illustrated by the sculpture of
Horemheb and Amenia at the British Museum, supporting the conclusion that Maia’s hairstyle belongs to a distinct private convention, quite different from the sculpture’s divine iconographic type.
Figure 12.Sculpture of a husband and wife, thought to be Horemheb and Amenia, ca. 1350 BCE. British Museum. Reg. No. 1839,0921.726. Note the fringed wig similar to that worn by Maia in her tomb reliefs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Pymouss.
The hairstyle of the sculpture is instead more consistent with divine female iconography of the Late and Ptolemaic periods, lending additional support to identifying the figure as Isis in the guise of a royal nurse.
Figure 13.Fragment of a 4th–3rd century BCE depiction of Isis with thick plaits and no wig fringe. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Object No. 2021.41.39. Bequest of Nanette B. Kelekian, 2020.
The composition transcends domestic commemoration and
situates Horus-Osiris within the eternal cycle of royal death and regeneration
with the divine mother Isis as the protector and the guarantor of royal
resurrection and legitimacy.
Van Dijk himself notes that the female figure's slender
body, elongated limbs, and particularly her long thin legs and elongated feet
are reminiscent of the goddess in the limestone Amun and Mut dyad from the
Luxor cachette—an inadvertent acknowledgment of a divine quality in her
rendering that sits uneasily with a historical human identification.
Taken together, the sculpture’s provenance in a cultic
depositional context, the iconographic divergence from Maia’s personal
conventions, and the divine physical qualities that Van Dijk himself noted
converge on a single interpretation. The female figure is best understood as
Isis rather than a historical wet nurse. The deliberate blurring of the
boundary between nurse and divine mother may constitute the sculpture’s central
theological argument: that the intimate human relationship between nurse and royal
child reflects the eternal divine relationship between Isis and Horus-Osiris,
transforming a votive image into a statement about the cosmic regenerative
cycle that sustains royal identity beyond death.
Earlier interpretive proposals complicate but do not
displace this reading. Hastings and Smith (1997) note the possibility that the
piece was removed from a New Kingdom tomb chapel, a view that Van Dijk (2010)
attributes specifically to Hastings. However, its proximity to Maia’s tomb, as
documented in Zivie’s 1996 excavation publication, is incidental and lacks
independent archaeological evidentiary value.
This sculpture therefore occupies an instructive and complex
position. It retains selective naturalistic sensitivity to the child's body
while subordinating relational warmth to formal composure and funerary
symbolism. The child is present not only as Horus but as Osiris—legitimacy not
simply secured but continuously renewed through divine maternal protection.
The Ramesside Transition: From Naturalism to Convention
A limestone relief of Ramesses II as a child, now in the Louvre, demonstrates that Amarna-style gestural naturalism persisted well into the early Ramesside period. The young prince is depicted with his finger raised to his mouth — precisely the kind of spontaneous, self-directed gesture that characterizes Amarna child imagery — while his torso exhibits the softly rounded belly and naturally occurring skin folds at the abdomen consistent with the unidealized rendering of a young child's body.
Figure 14.Ramesses II as a child. Louvre, Paris. Acc. No. N 522. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Mbzt.
These are not the exaggerated corporeal distortions of Amarna royal ideology but the moderated residue of its observational legacy, now detached from its original theological load-bearing function and absorbed into the broader repertoire of child representation. That such naturalistic conventions appear on a monument of Ramesses II confirms that the post-Amarna recalibration was not a clean erasure but a selective retention — certain Amarna innovations in child iconography had by this point become sufficiently normalized that they could be deployed without ideological implication.
Yet even as Amarna's observational legacy persisted in some early Ramesside contexts, it was simultaneously being absorbed into a very different visual program—naturalistic convention available for intimate or commemorative contexts, theological formalism deployed where institutional statement was required. That both tendencies could coexist within the same reign suggests not inconsistency but a deliberate repertoire. The distinction becomes visible in a granite statue of Ramesses II as crown prince, protected by the falcon deity Hauron, now in the Cairo Museum.
Figure 15.Granite statue of Ramesses II as crown prince, protected by the falcon deity Hauron, marking a significant recalibration in the visual legitimization of the royal heir. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor John Bodsworth.
The finger-to-mouth gesture—absent from the Sobeknakht infant, whose naturalism resides instead in observed nursing behavior, weight distribution, and developmental specificity—functions here not as behavioral observation but as pure iconographic sign, held statically for legibility rather than enacted as evidence of biological presence. Where the Sobeknakht sculptor looked at an infant and recorded what infants do, the Ramesside sculptor reached for what infants are conventionally understood to signify. The child does not reach, grasp, or lean; he sits enclosed within the falcon's sheltering wings, passive recipient of divine protection rather than active conduit of dynastic vitality. The composition may additionally operate as a three-dimensional hieroglyphic rebus spelling the king's name—the sun disk above, the child figure at center, the sedge plant in hand—further subordinating the child body to a system of symbolic legibility rather than biological immediacy.
The contrast with Amarna is structural. Where the household stele animated the royal daughters as living proof of the Aten's circulation, generating visual energy through gesture and interaction, this statue encloses the heir within a divine framework that does the legitimizing work on his behalf. The child need not demonstrate vitality because the falcon's wings guarantee it. Institutional theology has replaced visual argument. The heir's body is present, correctly marked, and iconographically legible—but it is no longer required to persuade.
Ramesside Abundance and Formalization
By the reign of Ramesses II, royal children appear frequently but within formalized constraints (Robins, 1997). Proportions are coherent, but individuality subdued. Multiplicity replaces vulnerability. Institutional confidence reduces the need for anatomical emphasis.
Figure 16.Stylized procession of royal princes carved on the walls of the Temple of Ramesses II at Luxor. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Olaf Tausch.
What Ramesside workshops inherited from Amarna was therefore not the ideological program but its residue—a trained attentiveness to the young body that had been absorbed into standard sculptural practice. Under conditions of restored institutional confidence, that attentiveness would be deployed not as argument but as convention: multiplied, formalized, and stripped of the urgency that had first brought it into focus.
In the mature Ramesside program, this formalization extends into proliferation. At Abu Simbel and the Ramesseum, royal children appear in considerable numbers, processed in registers behind their father in battle and ritual scenes. Proportions are coherent and age markers conventionally applied, but individuality is subdued and developmental specificity absent. The sheer multiplication of royal offspring projects dynastic abundance rather than dynastic vulnerability. Where the Sobeknakht statue required a single, exceptionally rendered infant to make the case for continuity—one specific child, weight-bearing and biologically present—the mature Ramesside program makes the same case through accumulation. Institutional confidence has transformed corporeal proof into an iconographic inventory.
The Late Period: From Naturalism to Divine Formalism
The Late Period witnessed neither the abandonment of naturalistic convention nor its universal retention, but rather its coexistence with an increasingly formalized divine iconographic program — one shaped in part by the political imperatives of a native Egyptian dynasty reasserting cultural and religious legitimacy after centuries of foreign rule. An anhydrite sculpture of Isis nursing Horus from the Metropolitan Museum of Art dated between the Third Intermediate and Late Period demonstrates that even where naturalistic rendering of the child's body persists into the Late Period, it is contained within a formally hierarchical divine composition that subordinates observation to iconographic legibility.
Figure 17.Anhydrite statuette of Isis nursing the infant Horus, dedicated by Ankhhor, Dynasty 25–26, ca. 733–525 BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Acc. No. 45.2.10. Rogers Fund, 1945.
Naturalism and formalism coexist within a single object — a balance that shifts decisively toward formalization in a gilded bronze Isis nursing Horus recovered by Emery from the same archaeological context as the Saqqara sculpture previously discussed.
Figure 18.Gilded bronze statuette of Isis nursing Horus, Late Period (ca. 664–332 BCE). Memphite Region, Saqqara North, Animal Necropolis, Temple of Nectanebo II, Temple Terrace. Egyptian Museum, Cairo.
Here the composition is formalized, the goddess standing with the infant held at her breast in a pose of iconic stillness rather than observed interaction, reflecting the period's investment in stable, legible divine imagery as an instrument of theological and political consolidation. Most significantly for the present argument, Isis wears a thickly braided wig without a lower fringe — precisely the hairstyle exhibited by the female figure in the Saqqara sculpture and precisely the hairstyle that diverges from Maia's established personal iconographic conventions as documented in her tomb reliefs. That an unambiguously identified Isis figure wearing this specific wig type was deposited in the same cultic assemblage as the Saqqara sculpture lends decisive iconographic support to Emery's original identification of the female figure as Isis rather than the historical wet nurse Maia.
Conclusion: Infant Naturalism as Political Exposition
Across Egyptian history, infant representation oscillates between schematic symbolism and anatomical specificity. The pattern suggests that realism intensifies when dynastic legitimacy requires embodied assertion — whether during late Middle Kingdom instability or Amarna theological isolation. The Sobeknakht statue stands at a crucial inflection point. The adult remains canonically ideal, anchoring tradition. The infant, however, is materially present, weight-bearing, and biologically convincing. In a period of uncertain succession, the child's body becomes visual proof of continuity.
The nursing sculpture from the Sacred Animal Necropolis at Saqqara — conventionally identified as Maia with Tutankhamun but more plausibly a Late Period depiction of Isis nursing Horus-Osiris — represents a different but related deployment of the same ideological logic. The case for reidentification rests on converging strands of evidence: the sculpture's provenance in a cultic depositional context inconsistent with private funerary commemoration; the iconographic divergence of the female figure's hairstyle from Maia's established personal conventions as documented in her tomb reliefs; Van Dijk's own comparison of the female figure to divine rather than human prototypes; and most decisively, the recovery by Emery from the same cultic assemblage of a gilded bronze Isis nursing Horus whose female figure wears precisely the thickly braided, fringeless wig exhibited by the sculpture in question. That Van Dijk's stylistic arguments for a late 18th Dynasty date dissolve on examination — the rounded nursing belly attested from the Middle Kingdom, the black-outlined eyes from the Old Kingdom, the Amun and Mut dyad a visible monument available for later archaizing reference — leaves the archaeological evidence of the findspot as the most reliable chronological anchor, pointing to a 30th Dynasty or later date consistent with the cultic material recovered alongside it.
That dating situates the sculpture within a specific political and theological moment: a native Egyptian dynasty reasserting cultural and religious legitimacy after centuries of foreign rule, investing in stable, legible divine imagery as an instrument of consolidation. The Isis and Horus-Osiris nursing type was ideologically loaded in precisely this context — the divine mother's protection of the endangered royal child resonating with contemporary anxieties about sovereignty, continuity, and the survival of native kingship. The sculpture does not commemorate a historical individual. It makes a cosmic argument: that royal identity, however imperiled, is guaranteed by the eternal protective relationship between divine mother and royal child, and that death itself is absorbed into the regenerative cycle that Isis and Osiris together sustain.
When royal infant imagery becomes naturalistic — as in the Sobeknakht statue, the Amarna household stele, and the Late Period nursing sculpture — it represents not merely a response to political or theological pressure. It marks a deliberate suspension of the divine archetype in favor of the observed biological child. The naturalistic royal infant is theologically charged precisely because it departs from the convention that governs royal nursing imagery. It renders Horus as a specific child rather than as an eternal divine type, making the theological argument through embodied specificity rather than symbolic abstraction. The greater the ideological pressure requiring embodied
demonstration, the more completely the divine archetype gives way to the
observed biological child. This tension reaches its culmination in the Late
Period, when the distinct identities of Osiris and Horus collapsed into a
unified figure depicted with striking naturalism — a marked departure from
earlier, more hieratic conventions. In this synthesis the two finally converge,
and the infant body, rendered with an almost mortal softness, becomes the vessel
through which the paradox of divine humanity and human divinity finds its
fullest visual expression
Egyptian art did not evolve toward realism teleologically. Rather, realism functioned as a strategic visual language, activated in moments of political necessity. The contrast with later Isis lactans imagery makes the achievement clear. Where the votive tradition renders nursing schematically, as symbol, the Sobeknakht statue renders it observationally, as evidence. The artist looked at a mother and child and saw not a type but a specific pair — a particular infant with his own brow ridges, at his own developmental moment, touching his mother in ways that infants touch.
This is not a step toward a later convention. It is a response to specific circumstances — a moment when transmission of sovereign legitimacy required not merely symbolic assertion but embodied proof. The Sobeknakht statue is that proof, rendered in permanent form, for intimate viewing, by an artist who knew how to look. Infant naturalism thus emerges not as stylistic progress but as ideological instrument — a material argument for the survival of kingship.
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