Pyramidion

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Main hall of the Egyptian Museum, showing 4 black granite pyramidia
Main hall of the Egyptian Museum, showing 4 black granite pyramidia

In archaeological parlance, a pyramidion, (pl. pyramidia), is the uppermost piece, or capstone, of an Egyptian pyramid.[1] They were called benbenet in Ancient Egyptian, which associated the pyramid as a whole with the sacred benben stone.[2] In Egypt's Old Kingdom, pyramidions were generally made of diorite, granite, or fine limestone, which was then covered in gold or electrum, while during the Middle Kingdom and through to the end of the Pyramid building era, they were built from granite.[3] A pyramidion was "covered in gold leaf to reflect the rays of the sun"; during Egypt's Middle Kingdom, they were often "inscribed with royal titles and religious symbols."[4]

Very few pyramidia have survived into modern times. Most of those that have are made of polished black granite, inscribed with the name of the pyramid's owner. A total of four pyramidia—the world's largest collection—is housed in the main hall of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Among them is the pyramidion from the so-called Black Pyramid of Amenemhet III at Dahshur.[5]

A badly-damaged red granite pyramidion, thought to have been created for the Red Pyramid of Sneferu at Dahshur, has been reconstructed and is on open-air display beside that pyramid—it presents a minor mystery, however, as its angle of inclination is steeper than that of the edifice it was apparently created to surmount.

Scribe Moses//Mes,S
in hieroglyphs
Y4 F31 S29

During the New Kingdom, some private underground tombs were marked on the surface by small brick pyramids that terminated in pyramidia. The four lateral sides included texts and scenes related to the cult of the Sun God (as the Representation of Pharaoh).

The scenes typically depict the course of the sun, rising on one lateral face, setting on the opposite face, and traveling, through the night, through the underworld ruled by Osiris.

The pyramidion of the scribe Moses (mes,s), (New Kingdom, 19th Dynasty, ca 1250 BC, limestone, .53 m tall) depicts himself making an offering, with his name, on two opposite faces. The adjacent opposite faces feature a baboon: "Screeching upon the rising of the Sun, and the Day". (The baboon is also the god-scribe representation of the scribe, for the God Thoth.[6])

The pyramidion of Ptahemwia, (19th Dynasty, Ramesside Period, ca 1200 BC, limestone, .28 m wide, .42 m tall) likewise displays sun-related scenes.[7] The Sun God, Re-Horakhti, and the god of the Underworld, Osiris, are shown on one lateral face.

Facing the two Gods, on the adjacent lateral face, is the deceased Ptahemwia, standing in an offering pose, facing three columns of hieroglyphs.[8]

  1. ^ Toby Wilkinson, The Thames and Hudson Dictionary of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, 2005. p.197
  2. ^ Wilkinson, op. cit., p.197
  3. ^ Pyramidions by Alan Winston
  4. ^ Wilkinson, op. cit., p.197
  5. ^ editors Regine Schulz and Matthias Seidel (w/ 34 contributing Authors), Egypt, The World of the Pharaohs, Konemann, Germany: 1998. Amenemhet III, 1842-1797 BC, p.115
  6. ^ Peck, William. Splendors of Ancient Egypt, William H. Peck, The Detroit Institute of Arts, (University Lithoprinters Inc., Ann Arbor, Mich.), c 1997, (p. 67). (Moses Pyramidion from "Roemer and Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany".)
  7. ^ eds. R. Schulz and M. Seidel, op. cit., Pyramidions: Ptahemwia, p.252
  8. ^ Ibid., p.252
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