荷鲁斯和其他埃及神在罗马战士的伪装下:一种可能的解释

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Ivan Ladynin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章涉及了普希金美术博物馆(A.S. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts)埃及收藏的一些纪念碑,这些纪念碑展示了以罗马战士为伪装的埃及神:I, 1a 2985(最著名和最广泛复制的物品)-一尊戴着双冠、身穿罗马盔甲和礼服的鹰头神荷鲁斯(Horus)雕像(青铜);I, 1a 2794 -一个类似的小雕像,尺寸较小,保存较差(有镀金痕迹的青铜);I, 1a 6667 -一尊穿着罗马盔甲和衣服的狗或豺狼头的阿努比斯神的雕像(青铜);I, 1a 3389 -一个半身像,显示鹰头神荷鲁斯戴着nemes,太阳盘和蛇在他的头上(玻璃糊);I, 1a 5382 -一块石碑,显示狮身人面像神图图,狮头是他胸前盔甲板的一部分。除了重新发布这些物品外,本文的目的是对它们所属于的图像类型提出解释(这种类型还包括许多Apius的图像和罗马伪装下的Khnum的单一图像)。这一类型中最多元的一组是荷鲁斯的形象,在笔者看来,这些形象反映了由埃及人塑造的罗马君主统治埃及的概念:与其说他们是由一个具体的罗马强人统治,不如说是由他身上体现的豪斯神统治,豪斯神在很大程度上吸收了他的个性。这种埃及统治者的“衍生神圣性”的概念可以追溯到第一波斯统治时期,它在很大程度上起了一种补偿作用,因为它使埃及人更能容忍外国和不友好的统治。在罗马时代,它反映在皇帝的头衔中,荷鲁斯的名字是由一组表达统治者荷鲁斯神品质的绰号所塑造的。也许这个概念在荷鲁斯和阿努比斯的形象中表现出来,也许在罗马伪装下的克努姆;图图的形象,也许还有阿比斯的形象,更像是荷鲁斯形象中发展起来的一种图像标准的转移。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Horus and Other Egyptian Deities in the Guise of Roman Warriors: A Possible Interpretation
The article deals with a number of monuments in the Egyptian collection of the A.S. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts showing Egyptian deities in the guise of Roman warriors: I, 1a 2985 (the best known and widely reproduced object) – a statuette of the falcon-headed god Horus in the double crown and in the Roman armour and dress (bronze); I, 1a 2794 – a similar statuette of smaller size and worse preservation (bronze with traces of gilding); I, 1a 6667 – a statuette of the dog-or jackal-headed god Anubis in the Roman armour and dress (bronze); I, 1a 3389 – a bust showing the falcon-headed god Horus wearing nemes, with the sun-disc and snake over his head (glass paste); I, 1a 5382 – a stela showing the sphinx-god Tutu with a lion head being a part of the armour-plate on his chest. Aside from republishing these objects, the aim of the article is to propose an interpretation of the iconographic type, to which they belong (this type also includes a number of Apius’ images and a singular image of Khnum in the Roman guise). The most multiple group in this type are the images of Horus, which, in author’s view, reflect the concept of the Roman principes’ rule in Egypt shaped by Egyptians: they were ruled not so much by a specific Roman strong-man as by the god Hous embodied in him and largely absorbing his personality. This concept of Egyptian rulers’ “derivative sacrality” dated back to the First Persian Domination and played largely a compensatory role, as it made a foreign and unfriendly rule more tolerable for Egyptians. In the Roman time it was reflected in emperors’ titularies, in which the Horus’ name was shaped of a set of epithets conveying upon a ruler the qualities of the god Horus. Probably the concept manifested itself in the images of Horus and Anubis, perhaps Khnum in the Roman guise; the images of Tutu and, perhaps, Apis rather show a transfer on them of the iconographic standard developed in the imagery of Horus.
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来源期刊
Vostok (Oriens)
Vostok (Oriens) Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.30
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0.00%
发文量
25
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