EditorialEgyptian art. Colossal statues of a pharaoh, his wife and the god Hapi (God of fertility). Temporary exhibition "Egypt's Sunken Treasures" (Egypt's Sunken Treasures), objects found in underwater excavations in Alexandria. Martin Gropius. Berlin. Germany.
EditorialA statue of a woman from ancient Egypt refers to the sacrifices that were presented to “Hapi,” the god of the annual flooding of the Nile in ancient Egyptian religion, in Egypt, July 15, 2018. (Laura Boushnak/The New York Times)
EditorialCanopic jars for the embalmed intestines of the defunct The jars bear the following inscriptions: Hapi Amset, Dua-mutef, and Kebehsenuf; the last contains the intes-tines of Itj, engraver in the temple of Anubis. Egypt. Limestone (600 BCE) -Inv. 7186, ...
EditorialStela of Senu, New Kingdom, Dynasty 18, ca. 1390?1352 B.C., From Egypt; Probably from Middle Egypt, Tuna el-Gebel, Limestone, H. 75 cm (29 1/2 in); w. 32 cm (12 5/8 in), This stela depicts a royal scribed named Senu adoring the deities Imseti and Hapi,...
EditorialEgyptian art. Colossal statues of a pharaoh, his wife and the god Hapi (God of fertility). Temporary exhibition "Egypt's Sunken Treasures" (Egypt's Sunken Treasures), objects found in underwater excavations in Alexandria. Martin Gropius. Berlin. Germany.
EditorialEgyptian Art. Dendera. Hathor Temple. Relief on a column base that depicts the god Hapi (left and right) with water lily and papyrus to join Upper and Lower Egypt. North wall. Exterior face.
EditorialCanopic jars for the embalmed intestines of the defunct The jars bear the following inscriptions: Hapi Amset, Dua-mutef, and Kebehsenuf; the last contains the intes-tines of Itj, engraver in the temple of Anubis. Egypt. Limestone (600 BCE) -Inv. 7186, ...