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The
Images
In room E of house 124 archaeologists
found three small pieces of wall paintings (in case
7). All three fragments did not come from the same wall: the mud plasters
they are painted on are different, as are the colors of the backgrounds,
as well as the scales of the figures and other motifs. One piece (no.
39) preserves just a line of red and green dots. Another (no. 38) preserves
an image of the face of the infant Harpocrates holding a finger to the
corner of his mouth. The third one (no. 37) shows a piece of cloth behind
a bent arm or leg: the cloth is pink trimmed in white on one side and
blueish-gray outlined in black on the other. A fourth painting fragment
(no. 36) was found in the layer below, in a disturbed area with remains
from various periods. Part of the head of a horse, wearing a red bridle,
is preserved on this piece.
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36
Painting fragment: horses
head
Karanis, 29-B166*-H, R:*
Kelsey Museum, 26981 |
37
Painting fragment: a limb and
cloth
Karanis, 24-124E-I, R
Kelsey Museum, 26982 |
38
Painting fragment: Harpocrates
Karanis, 24-124E-J, R
Kelsey Museum, 26984 |
39
Painting fragment: dots
Karanis, 24-124E-I, R
Kelsey Museum, 26983 |
Although not all painted
on the same wall, these fragments may well have belonged to the
same decorative scheme in use through several architectural phases
and periods of habitation. A similarly complex decorative scheme
is illustrated by the photograph of the wall paintings at house
B50 (see photo at right), which covered two adjacent walls with
images of the goddess, Isis, holding her infant son, Harpocrates,
on her lap and the soldier god, Heron, riding a horse. Several passages
in the paintings from house B50 are strikingly similar to those
on the fragments from house 124: Harpocrates with his finger to
his mouth, the bridled head of the horse, and the bent knee against
the blanket-covered back of the horse.
There is a conspicuous
contrast between the plainness of the textile artifacts and the
special fabrics represented in the paintings (Harpocrates
knitted socks and the fancy horse blanket). The paintings represent
not the drab objects in use in this house in everyday life but the
special fabrics of extra-ordinary circumstances. They convey the
inhabitants expectations for what cloth could be.
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House B50, room E
Paintings, on two sides of niche, of Heron and Isis with Harpocrates
Kelsey Museum Archives, 5.2159
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House B50, room E
Detail of the painting of Heron
Compare the bent leg and horse blanket to the image in the large
painting fragment from house 124.
After a painted photograph by Hamzeh Carr, ca. 1927
Kelsey Museum Archives, 4.2922
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Heron,
Isis, and Harpocrates
During the Ptolemaic
and Roman periods, the venerable Egyptian divinities Isis and her
son, Harpocrates, acquired new attributes: Isis, for example, came
to wear the distinctive costume of a shawl draped and knotted over
her shoulders, leaving her breasts bare. At the same time, new divinities
enter the Egyptian pantheon: Heron was closely associated with the
militarized Horus, a mature aspect of Harpocrates. It is not at
all unusual to find Heron dressed as a soldier.
Early
Holy Icons
In this usage of the
term, icons are sacred images, representations of holy persons and
events. These appear to have developed as images for private religious
devotion in the home during the later Roman period, in the third
and fourth centuries. The best evidence for early icons are paintings
from Egypt, like the ones shown here.
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