

An edition of The priest, the prince, and the Pasha (2015)
the life and afterlife of an ancient Egyptian sculpture
By Lawrence Michael Berman
Publish Date
2015
Publisher
MFA Publications,MFA Publications, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Language
eng
Pages
206
Description:
"Sometime in the fourth century BC, an unknown Egyptian master carved an exquisite portrait in dark-green stone. The statue that included this remarkably lifelike head of a priest, who was probably a citizen of ancient Memphis, may have been damaged when the Persians conquered Egypt in 343 B.C. before it was ritually buried in a temple complex dedicated to the worship of the sacred Apis bull .... After almost two millennia, the head was excavated by August Mariette, a founding figure in French archaeology, under a permit from the Ottoman Pasha. Sent to France as part of a collection of antiquities assembled for the inimitable Bonaparte prince known as Plon-Plon, it found a home in his faux Pompeain palace. After disappearing again, it resurfaced in the personal collection of Edward Perry Warren, a turn-of-the twentieth-century American aesthete, who sold it to the Museum of Fine Arts."--book jacket.
subjects: Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Excavations (Archaeology), Private collections, Portraits, Priests, Egyptian Portrait sculpture, History, Sculpture, egypt, Museum of fine arts, boston
People: Edward Perry Warren (1860-1928), Napoléon-Joseph-Charles-Paul Bonaparte Prince (1822-1891), Auguste Mariette (1821-1881), Saʻīd Pasha, Viceroy of Egypt (1822-1863)
Places: Egypt