- Younger Memnon
Sculpture
title=The Younger Memnon (Ramesses II )
artist=Anon.
year=about1270 BC
type=Granite colossal figure
city=London
museum=British Museum
The Younger Memnon statue is one of two colossal granite heads from theAncient Egypt ian mortuary temple called theRamesseum at Thebes, depicting thepharaoh Ramesses II wearing thenemes head-dress with a cobra diadem on top.Description
It is 2.7 m high by 2m wide (across the shoulders), weighs 7.25 tons and was cut from a single block of two-coloured granite, with a slight variation of normal conventions in that the eyes look down slightly more than usual and to exploit the different colours (broadly speaking, the head is in one colour, and the body another).
Acquisition
Belzoni
Napoleon 's men tried and failed to dig and remove it to France during his1798 expedition there, during which he did acquire but then lost theRosetta Stone . It was during this attempt that the hole on the right of the torso (just above Ramesses's right nipple) is said to have been made.Following an idea mentioned to him by his friend
Johann Ludwig Burckhardt of digging the statue and bringing it to Britain, the British Consul General Henry Salt hired the adventurerGiovanni Belzoni inCairo in1815 for this purpose. Using his hydraulics and engineering skills, it was pulled on wooden rollers by ropes to the bank of the Nile oppositeLuxor by hundreds of workmen. However, no boat was yet available to take it up to Alexandria and so Belzoni carried out an expedition to Nubia, returning by October. With French collectors also in the area possibly looking to acquire the statue, he then sent workmen toEsneh to gain a suitable boat and in the meantime carried out further excavations in Thebes. He finally loaded the products of these digs, plus the Memnon, onto this boat and got it to Cairo by 15th December 1816. There he received and obeyed orders from Salt to unload all but the Memnon, which was then sent on toAlexandria and London without him.Anticipated by Shelley's poem "
Ozymandias ", the head arrived in London in 1818, where it acquired its name "The Younger Memnon", after the "Memnonianum" (the name in classical times for theRamesseum - the two statues at the entrance of the mortuary temple ofAmenhotep III were associated with Memnon in classical times - they are still known as theColossi of Memnon - , and the BM sculpture and its pair seem to have either been mistaken for them or suffered a similar misnaming).British Museum
It was later acquired from Salt in 1821 by the
British Museum and was at first displayed in the old Townley Galleries (now demolished) for several years, then installed (using heavy ropes and lifting equipment and with help from theRoyal Engineers ) in1834 in the new Egyptian Sculpture Gallery (now Room 4, where it now resides). The soldiers were commanded by a Waterloo veteran, MajorCharles Cornwallis Dansey , lame from a wound sustained there, who therefore sat whilst commanding them. On its arrival there, it could be said to be the first piece of Egyptian sculpture to be recognized as a work of art rather than a curiosity low down in thechain of art (with ancient Greek art at the pinnacle of this chain). It is object EA 19.ources
* [http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/aes/c/colossal_bust_of_ramesses.aspx BM Catalogue entry]
* [http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/aes/h/henry_salts_firman.aspx Salt's permission to remove objects]
* [http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/archives/w/william_alexander,_installing.aspx Its installation in the Museum]
*T.G.H. James and W.V. Davies, Egyptian sculpture (London, The British Museum Press, 1983), p. 41
*G. Belzoni, Narrative of the operations and recent discoveries within the pyramids, temples, tombs, and excavations in Egypt and Nubia I (London, John Murray, 1822), pp. 61-80
*S. Quirke and A.J. Spencer, The British Museum book of ancient Egypt (London, The British Museum Press, 1992), pp. 126-7
*Albert M. Lythgoe, 'Statues of the Goddess Sekhmet', "The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin" Vol. 14, No. 10, Part 2 (Oct., 1919), pp. 1+3-23
*Stephanie Moser, Wondrous Curiosities: Ancient Egypt at the British Museum (University of Chicago Press, 2006), ISBN-10: 0226542092
* [http://encyclopaedic.net/american-encyclopedia/john-baptist-belzoni.html Encyclopaedic.net - extracts from Belzoni's account]
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