The Gazelle in Ancient Egyptian Art: Image and Meaning
2009 (English)Doctoral thesis, monograph (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
This thesis establishes the basic images of the gazelle in ancient Egyptian art and their meaning. A chronological overview of the categories of material featuring gazelle images is presented as a background to an interpretation.
An introduction and review of the characteristics of the gazelle in the wild are presented in Chapters 1-2. The images of gazelle in the Predynastic material are reviewed in Chapter 3, identifying the desert hunt as the main setting for gazelle imagery.
Chapter 4 reviews the images of the gazelle in the desert hunt scenes from tombs and temples. The majority of the motifs characteristic for the gazelle are found in this context. Chapter 5 gives a typological analysis of the images of the gazelle from offering processions scenes. In this material the image of the nursing gazelle is given particular importance.
Similar images are also found on objects, where symbolic connotations can be discerned (Chapter 6). References to healing and regeneration are found, particularly in relationship to the context of the objects.
The gazelle is found in a divine context in a limited material (Chapter 7). A discussion of these sources sees a focus on the gazelle as representative for the desert mountains as the setting for death and rebirth. This relates to the gazelle as a feminine image with a connection to the models of female divinity (Chapter 8).
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Uppsala, 2009. , p. 262
Series
Uppsala Studies in Egyptology, ISSN 1650-9838 ; 6
Keywords [en]
gazelle, Egyptian art, Egyptian religion, hunt, offering, desert fauna, Heb Sed, Hathor, Solar Eye
National Category
Specific Languages
Research subject
Egyptology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-107642OAI: oai:DiVA.org:uu-107642DiVA, id: diva2:232265
Public defence
2009-10-02, Auditorium Minus, Gustavianum, Akademigatan 3, 753 10 Uppsala, 09:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
2009-09-112009-08-202018-01-13Bibliographically approved