A Naos of Nekhthorheb from Bubastis: Religious Iconography and
Temple building in the 30th Dynasty

Neal Spencer, with a contribution by Daniela Rosenow
ISBN 978 086159 156 5
British Museum Research Publication 156
All chapters
Illustrations
Figures
Plates
The first full publication of a monumental
red granite naos of king Nekhthorheb from the temple at Bubastis in
the Nile Delta (360–343 BC). Originally 3.5m tall, fragments
were excavated by Edouard Naville in the 1880s, many of which are
now in the British Museum, the naos is an important source for late
religious iconography and relief sculpture as it bears extensive
depictions of divine figures, arranged in registers and carved
in exquisite detail at a small scale.
A comprehensive photographic coverage of the
architecture and decoration is presented, alongside facsimilies,
plans and reconstructions. The purpose and meaning of the
decoration is discussed, and the naos placed in the context of the
extensive temple building programme of the 30th dynasty, which
sought to complement military defence with sacred protection in the
face of Persian invasion attempts.
A chapter by Daniela Rosenow presents results
from recent excavations by the Egyptian-German Joint
Mission to Bubastis, with important information on the 30th dynasty
temple of Bastet.