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Palette of King Narmer
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Thu Feb 15 2001 at 4:18:27
The Palette of King Narmer
A picture of the palette may be
found
at: http://talariaenterprises.com/images/tal132.jpeg
You may want to
review
it first before reading this
write-up
as it
refers
to it
constantly
.
Background
:
The Ancient Egyptians that everybody had a
ka
and a
ba
, the
ka
being the
spiritual
person and the ba
being
the body. When the
ba
died, the ka stayed in the
body
until it was
destroyed
. Then the ka would roam
confused
until it found a place to stay. That's why artist would make
renderings
of the dead so that, just in case the body was destroyed, the ka would have some place to go.
Now, Egyptians thought of art very
differently
then most
modern artists
. Art, whether it be a
drawing
,
sculpture
, etc. all was not just a
depiction
of something. It had some power, such as the palette's
ability
to hold someone's ka. In fact, when creating a sculpture of a "
pharaoh
" (which they believed to be
divine
beings) the artists would paint the
eyes
last because they
believed
the sculpture could
see
, and then added
eye shadow
to
reduce glare
, and make them more comfortable.
Now we know that the palette of king Narmer was made by a man because it was a sculpture and all of these positions were held by men. Not that
high position
s were not held by
women
. Many women were rich
artists
:
weavers
, some
painting
, etc. but all sculptors were
men
.
Ancient Egyptian artist were highly
trained
and highly
paid
, and only the rich could be artists. They drew humans in a standard form to make sure every body knew they were human. They were drawn in a way that every part looked the most human-like for example, feet and legs were drawn in a
profile
to one side or another because if it was facing
forward
then you wouldn't be
able to tell
it was a foot. The
torso
and
shoulders
and everything were drawn facing forward towards the
viewer
for the
same reason
. Then
head
was drawn in a profile to with the eyes facing forward like the torso (which no
human
can really do).
The Palette
:
This was designed to
analyze
and
explain
the palette.
Let's begin analyzing the palette's
obverse
side (obverse=
front
reverse
=
back
). This side has three
sections
divided. The reverse side has four sections. Each section is divided by a
thick line
representing
the
ground
. The sections are not necessarily in any
chronological
order and each one may have more than one
perspective
. All these are represented in the
Palette of King Narmer
. We'll start on the top on the obverse side. In the middle there is a weird fish shape thing and a needle thing below it making a "T" shape. This spells out "NAR-MER". And on both sides there are columns representing his
palace
. This is how we know the palette was for Narmer. There are two cow heads on either side of his name. There a four
cow heads
on the whole palette (two on the other side. The top sections of the obverse and reverse side are identical). Each head represents Hathor the wife of
Horus
. But the cow has
horns
like a
bull
! How could it be a
female
? Well, she was the
goddess
of the
moon
and horns represent the crescent moon. Horus is the defender of the gods because the gods were supposedly in the heavens. The stars used to be a place that man could worship and never go to, so the gods must be there. Horus had a
mother
and
father
(
Isis
and
Osiris
) and an
uncle
(
Set
). Set
killed
Osiris out of jealousy and Horus took
revenge
on Set. He is the Hawk god associated with the sun because birds were sacred as cats were because they could
defy gravity
and become closer to the gods as man could not. Horus is supposed to be like opposites with his wife (
Sun and Moon
).
Now lets go to the second section. The
main figure
in this section is
Narmer
. In every
panel
the king is much larger than everyone else. He is wearing the
crown
of
upper Egypt
and carrying a
war club
. Behind him is his high priest who we know is a priest because of the way he wears his
loin clothes
with one hanging down in between his legs. He is carrying
ointments
to anoint the
sacred
king. You may notice that he has his own
plane
of ground to stand on but he is also much
smalle
r than the king. The king is also
grabbing
someone by the head. It is speculated but not confirmed that this is the king if lower Egypt. He has been stripped down to his loin cloth as a sign of shame. Some evidence to prove that this was the king of lower Egypt is that we see a man-headed hieroglyph above him with
papyrus
plants coming out of his back. Papyrus was the plant of lower Egypt and the lotus blossom was that of upper Egypt (not that they grew there, but it's just like the US has states and state flowers). Horus (the
Hawk
god) is above the
hieroglyph
grasping
the papyrus in his
talon
. In his other talon he is holding a hook into the man's nose as another sign of shame towards lower Egypt. This says that Horus (protector of the gods) was on Narmer's side and helped him defeat lower Egypt. Although, Narmer takes all the credit for defeating them. Kings always took credit for any military or technological advances that happened during their rule because supposedly it was them who correctly
channeled
their mat and made it possible for these advances to happen. You'll notice that none of Narmer's troops were shown with him. All that the third section of the obverse side shows is some lower Egyptian
soldiers
cowering in fear of Narmer. This is one of the more realistic portrayals of humans in this
palette
.
Now let's go to the reverse side. remember that the first (top) section is
identical
to the obverse side so we can skip that. The section shows a smaller (but still in proportion to the obverse side)
version
of Narmer with his priest behind him, still carrying those
ointments
and oils. This time he does not have his own plane of ground. Horus is still to the upper-right side of him but is abbreviated by only showing the head of a hawk. To the right of him are four people carrying flags. These are most-likely the
flags
of the different
city states
displaying the unification of Egypt. To the right of them are several bodies of enemy troops lying dead in rows. Most of the palette up until now has been in a profile view but you wouldn't be able to see the bodies layed out if they were in a profile view so the
bodies
are from a bird's-eye view. You can see that their heads have been chopped off and laid neatly in-between their
legs
.
In the next section down, you can see two great
lionesses
with
elongated
necks
intertwining
. In between their necks, a small circle is formed (Lions represent royalty as they are on the top of the food chain as the rich are in the economic chain). This is the
utilitarian
part of their art. This circle is pressed down and can be used as a
cosmetic
holder or make-up mixer. From the marks on the palette of king Narmer, it has not been used for such a
purpose
and may not have been designed for it because the area is so small. If they were really going to use it, they probably would have made it a lot
larger
as most other ones are. Their are two priests on either side of the lions. We know they are priest because of the loin cloth again. Some argue that this is two king Narmers which is
entirely possible
because Narmer was a
priest
himself. All kings are
essentially
"the highest priest". If this is true then he is most likely taming both the east and west. The whole palette was mostly about him
unifying
everything.
Now on the last section, You see a bull which is one of Narmer's
familiar
gods. Every pharaoh claims to have
descended
from the line of a god, a
specific
god. And the gods in your family were called farmiliars. The
bull
god guy is smashing down a
protective wall
of lower Egypt and
crushing
a man inside once again
claiming
that the gods were on Narmer's side and helped him
take over
.
The End
:
Well, this work is the
earliest work
standardizing
this form of drawing humans. It is also implying that Narmer started the
Dynastic periods
of Egypt which is possible. This is one of the most
famous pieces
of
ancient Egyptian art
.
printable version
chaos
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