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"Sometime in the fourth century BC, an unknown Egyptian master carved an exquisite portrait in dark-green stone. The statue that included this remarkably lifelike head of a priest, who was probably a citizen of ancient Memphis, may have been damaged when the Persians conquered Egypt in 343 B.C. before it was ritually buried in a temple complex dedicated to the worship of the sacred Apis bull .... After almost two millennia, the head was excavated by August Mariette, a founding figure in French archaeology, under a permit from the Ottoman Pasha. Sent to France as part of a collection of antiquities assembled for the inimitable Bonaparte prince known as Plon-Plon, it found a home in his faux Pompeain palace. After disappearing again, it resurfaced in the personal collection of Edward Perry Warren, a turn-of-the twentieth-century American aesthete, who sold it to the Museum of Fine Arts."--book jacket.
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Subjects
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Excavations (Archaeology), Private collections, Portraits, Priests, Egyptian Portrait sculpture, History, Sculpture, egypt, Museum of fine arts, bostonPeople
Edward Perry Warren (1860-1928), Napoléon-Joseph-Charles-Paul Bonaparte Prince (1822-1891), Auguste Mariette (1821-1881), Saʻīd Pasha, Viceroy of Egypt (1822-1863)Places
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The priest, the prince, and the Pasha: the life and afterlife of an ancient Egyptian sculpture
2015, MFA Publications, MFA Publications, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
in English
- First edition.
0878467963 9780878467969
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 171-192) and index.
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The Physical Object
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October 22, 2021 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
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July 19, 2019 | Created by MARC Bot | import new book |