ClassificationsAncient Egyptian Art
Stela of the Standard Bearer Smen
Possible OriginThebes, Egypt, Africa
CultureEgyptian
Date1400-1390 BCE
MediumFine-grained limestone
Credit LineGift of the Georges Ricard Foundation
Dimensions25 9/16 x 17 5/16 x 2 3/4 in. (65 x 44 x 7 cm)
Object number2018.010.408
Label TextJust as we do today, the ancient Egyptians named their boats. This round-topped stela belongs to a man named Smen, meaning “goose” in ancient Egyptian, who served on the royal state barge called Meryamun. He was promoted to standard bearer of the boat, “Menkheperure-destroys-Syria,” indicating he saw active military service during King Thutmose IV’s northern Syrian campaigns. In ancient Egypt, standard bearers could command troops and collect men for expeditions.On the top register, Smen praises Osiris-Wennefer, enthroned before an offering table piled high with bread, meat, fruit, and onions. The table and two braziers below are topped with lotus flowers, symbolizing eternity. Above, two Anubis jackals and udjat eyes face an encircling shen-ring. Osiris-Wennefer, the mummiform deity of the underworld, wears an Atef-crown and holds a crook and flail, his standard insignia. His block throne rests on the hieroglyph for ma’at, relating to his role as the judge of the dead. Behind the throne, an ankh sign holds an ostrich feather sunshade aloft, symbolizing the god’s divine presence. Smen wears a wig, a bag tunic, and a kilt tied with a sash. The column of text behind Smen gives his lineage, “born of the mistress of the house, Tjenna, and the dignitary Shemsu.” On the register below, his wife, Hesetre, makes a bouquet and libation offering to her deceased parents, Nakht and Rui, who are seated on a couch. Before them is an offering table loaded with the same provisions as above; the only difference is two containers of wine wrapped with lotus buds below the table. Below the second register are four rows of text, “(1) An offering which the king gives to Osiris, ruler of eternity, the great god, lord of Abydos, so that he may give a voice offering of bread [sic], beer, ox, fowl, and cold water, wine [sic], and (2) milk, breathe the sweet north wind, drink from […],(3) the receipt of the offerings that come forth in the presence of the choicest things that are issued on their altar, that one may come forth to me bearing […] (from among the offerings of the lord of) eternity, for the ka of the serviceman (w’w) (of the boat) Mery-Amun, (S)men.” Another stela belonging to Smen in the Louvre, mentions his son Nai.
Exhibition HistoryMichael C. Carlos Museum, Veneralia 2019 Senuseret Collection Preview, May 18, 2019
Life and the Afterlife: Ancient Egyptian Art from the Senusret Collection, Michael C. Carlos Museum, February 4 - August 6, 2023
Published ReferencesMelinda K. Hartwig, ed., Life and The Afterlife: Ancient Egyptian Art from the Senusret Collection (Atlanta: Michael C. Carlos Museum, 2023), catalogue entry 24.
ProvenanceEx coll. Georges Ricard Foundation, Santa Barbara, California, possibly purchased from Jean-François Mignon, Aix-en Provence, France.
Status
Not on viewCollections
- Ancient Egyptian, Nubian, and Near Eastern Art
282-246 BCE
1539-1077 BCE
1076-944 BCE
1076-944 BCE
ca. 1334-1324 BCE
1958-1940 BCE
1400-1353 BCE
1076-723 BCE
2435-2306 BCE
1939-1760 BCE