Baby Pepe with Horus FalconBrooklyn Museum
A small statue of the Egyptian Alabaster of King Beibbi I
In the protection of Falcon Horus
Old country family 6 About 2300 BC
This statue is one of the most beautiful examples of sculpture in the ancient state, and belongs to the sixth family, about 2300 BC,
It is now housed in the Brooklyn Museum now built,
It is carved from alabaster,
Its height does not exceed 26 centimeters.
The statue represents King "Baby the First", the third king of the
Sixth Dynasty
Sitting on a bench with a high backrest,
He wears the thirtieth holiday garment (a love of a dam) that reaches his knees,
He wears a white upper crown on his head,
And the king here takes the Osirian position, arresting the right-hand in the mazhabah (Nakhaka), and arresting the left-hand with the scepter of authority (Hakkat).
Saqr Alif is behind the seat of the king.
And the statue embodies the Osirian Trinity,
The king here, in his Osirian position, represents the idol "Uzir".
And the seat represents the goddess "AST".
The seat was the most important symbol in the ancient Egyptian religion
As well as being a connotation of its name,
As for the falcon, it represents the idol "Hur", whose falcon was the most famous symbol ever
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