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File:18th dynasty pharaonic crown by John Campana.jpg

Summary

Description
English: "Circlet or Diadem of a[n unknown Egyptian] queen or a princess, electrum. H. (of stag's head) 8.5 cm. From Salhiya in the Eastern Delta. (near Avaris) Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Registration No.68.136.1."
  • "This unique crown, consisting of a band of electrum 1.5 cm wide perforated to take tie-strings at the rear and mounted with rosettes and animals heads, appears to have been made in Egypt largely under Asiatic inspiration, if it is not an Asiatic import. In the Egyptian 18th Dynasty, it became the fashion to decorate the diadems of princesses and lesser queens with the figure of a gazelle's head in place of the uraeus or vulture of principal queens. This crown with its four gazelle heads may have been part of the trousseau of a foreign princess sent as a bride for one of the [Ancient Egyptian] Pharaohs according to the [international] diplomacy of the age." (Cyril Aldred. Jewels of the Pharaohs. ed. Thames & Hudson Ltd. London: 1978)
Date 11 March 2008
Source http://www.flickr.com/photos/10647023@N04/2326648221/
Author tutincommon (Mr. John Campana)

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Checked copyright icon.svg This image, originally posted to Flickr, was reviewed on 23 October 2008 by the administrator or reviewer SterkeBak, who confirmed that it was available on Flickr under the stated license on that date.
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