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Padiiset's Statue

Ancient Egyptian sculpture From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Padiiset's Statue or Pateese's Statue,[1] also described as the Statue of a vizier usurped by Padiiset, is a basalt statue found in 1894 in an unknown location in the Egyptian delta[2][3] which includes an inscription referring to trade between Canaan and the Peleset (Philistines) and Ancient Egypt during the Third Intermediate Period.[4][3][5] It was purchased by Henry Walters in 1928, and is now in the Walters Art Museum.

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It is the second – and last – known Egyptian reference to Canaan, coming more than 300 years after the preceding known inscription.[6]

The statue is made of black basalt and measures 30.5 x 10.25 x 11.5 cm, and was created in the Middle Kingdom period to commemorate a government vizier. Scholars believe that a millennium later the original inscription was erased and replaced with inscriptions on the front and back representing "Pa-di-iset, son of Apy" and worshipping the gods Osiris, Horus, and Isis.[7]

The inscriptions read:

Ka of Osiris: Pa-di-iset, the justified, son of Apy.
The only renowned one, the impartial envoy of Philistine Canaan, Pa-di-iset, son of Apy.

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