Wooden figure of a hippopotamus-headed
figure
From a royal tomb in the Valley of the Kings,
Thebes, Egypt
End of the 18th Dynasty, around
1325 BC
Sent by Osiris to assist the king on his
journey to the Afterlife
Ancient Egyptians saw the hippopotamus as a
dangerous creature. It is often depicted in marshland scenes,
lurking below the water, or capsizing a boat. The male was
associated with chaos, often in the form of the god
Seth,
who murdered
Osiris
in an attempt to seize the throne of Egypt; scenes of hippo hunting
are occasionally found in tombs and temples and relate to this
myth. The fierceness of the female in protecting her young was
reflected in the goddess
Taweret.
Turning
the potential malevolence of the hippo around, its fearsome power
could be used to the benefit of the deceased. This figure was among
those provided for the king in his tomb, sent by the god Osiris to
assist him in his journey to the Afterlife. Such figures were also
believed to witness the transformation of the king into the sun-god
during his travel through the realm of the
dead.
The figure is shown
with its mouth gaping open to reveal peg-like teeth. The lower part
of its body is human, shown crouching and mummified. This is the
typical form that the demon guardians of the gates to the
Underworld take, as well as characterizing the
hieroglyphic
symbols for deities.
E. Otto, Egyptian art and the cults of (London, Thames and Hudson, 1968)