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Statue of the Apis bull

Place of production Egypt
Date 7th-4th centuries B.C. (664-332)
Object type sculpture
Medium, technique bronze
Dimensions

5.3 x 4 cm

Inventory number 51.1281
Collection Egyptian Art
On view This artwork is not on display

Apis, “the king of all sacred animals” in Egypt, is depicted in this bronze statue, probably dated to the Late Period. Thanks to the numerous positive characteristics attributed to bulls (procreative power, unfettered life energy), the Apis bull and its cult became part of the rituals connected to Egyptian kingship as early as the beginnings of the country’s written history. In the Late Period, votive bronze statues were produced and erected en masse to pay tribute to the Apis bull, which was considered the living image and earthly manifestation of Ptah.
The statuette shows the usual depiction of a bull on a pedestal striding forward with its left leg. He is wearing a sun disc between his horns from which a uraeus snake emerges. The sun disc, adorned with the uraeus snake, is almost completely fused with the horns of the animal. The statuette is of poor workmanship; the legs are thick, the tail and the pedestal are incomplete. There is a pin in the middle part of the pedestal.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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