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Add to your art collection from Egypt or home
and office decor with this interesting historical master museum replica of an
ancient Egyptian artifact. A wonderful Egyptian gift and a sure conversation
starter!
are tall, slender four sided shafts carved from a single
stone and topped with a point known as a pyramidion. Obelisks were known to
the ancient Egyptians as Tekhenu. They were typically inscribed with the
names and titles of the king who commissioned them. Obelisks were
considered to be sacred to the Sun God Ra, whose main center of worship
was at Heliopolis where the oldest surviving monumental obelisk in Egypt still
stands.
Obelisks
were first erected at Heliopolis and the practice was continued throughout the
pharaonic period. Obelisks probably evolved from the so-called Benben Stone
which resembles the pyramidion of an obelisk and was considered sacred to the
Sun God even before the appearance of the first pharaoh. These stones were the
fetish of the primeval God Atum (the setting sun) and the God Ra or
Ra-Harakhti (the rising sun). The stones were also associated with the
Benu-Bird or Phoenix. Some small squat obelisks survive from the early years
of dynastic Egypt when they usually stood in pairs before the entrances to the
tombs.
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Features
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- Is a unique conversation starter
- Makes an unusual gift
- Guaranteed to add interest to your room
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Specifications
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Size |
Approx. 16.5" H |
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Material |
Solid casting stone |
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Finish |
Antique stone |
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Shipping Weight |
10 Lbs |
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See Also
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