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Crowns of the Pharaohs: Missing Artifacts or Artistic Symbols of Divinity?


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Crowns of the Pharaohs: Missing Artifacts or Artistic Symbols of Divinity?

In Ancient Egypt, the gods and pharaohs were depicted with a crown, which, according to Egyptologists, was also taken into the grave for the afterlife. However, these crowns have never been found physically, neither inside nor outside graves. Did these crowns really exist? Could grave robbers have taken them all? Not all graves were looted before archaeologists discovered them and this strengthens the idea that the crowns were only used in depictions and statues, to indicate a certain, important phase in the life of a pharaoh.  

So it is perhaps not special that no crowns have ever been found, nor any of the artifacts that accompanied the pharaohs, like, for instance: the crook or the flail and the ankh or the was-sceptre that accompanied the gods. 

There used to be different types of crowns like the red crown or Desjret as the symbol of Lower-Egypt, the white crown or Hadjet as the symbol of Upper-Egypt, the double crown or Psjent as a combination of the white and the red crown, the war crown or Chepresjof which is little known, the Atef crown worn by the first mythical king Osiris and the Nemes headdress. Combinations of these mentioned crowns were also used. Goddesses and Egyptian queens were often depicted with a hood in the shape of a vulture. A pharaoh in times of war was depicted with the war crown and showed the status in the life of that pharaoh and his kingdom. Therefore, a particular crown is linked to a specific era. 

Gods were depicted with crowns because they were the first mythical kings in the time before creation and prior to the first Egyptian dynasty about 5,000 years ago. The pharaohs were the chosen ones and descendants from these gods in Egyptian mythology. Therefore, they were provided with a crown to show their divinity. Different crowns represent the life of the pharaoh, and the last crown or Nemes headdress marks the conclusion of earthly life and the beginning of life hereafter. The blue-striped Nemes headdress as a ****** mask. The best example is the ****** mask of Tut-Ankh-Amen. 

Image 1: The ****** mask of King Tut-Ankh-Amen. (Aikon at Dutch

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The Nemes headdress

The Nemes headdress or royal blue striped headdress isn’t a real crown but a cloth that often covered a crown and the backside of the head. Two parts of the cloth hung downwards alongside the ears on the front side of the shoulders and on the backside the cloth was tied together in a braid and provided with rings. The mythical Uraeuscobra, worn by gods and kings, was often combined with this headdress and symbolized the power and dominion on virility and prosperity of the land. Only in the case of Tut-Ankh-Amen the Uraeuscobra was depicted in combination with the vulture to symbolize his divinity as the ‘feathered serpent’. Just like Quetzalcoatl, the serpent **** in Aztec mythology. This makes the young king Tut-Ankh-Amen a very important pharaoh, despite other assertions. He is the only pharaoh depicted with the Nemes headdress provided with both the Uraeuscobra and the vulture. 

The Nemes on the ****** mask of Tut-Ankh-Amen is made of gold and lapis lazuli. Lapis lazuli is an azure blue gem, which, in Ancient Egypt, was often ***** inside graves to accompany the deceased one in the afterlife. Lapis lazuli was believed to be as a sacred stone with magical powers and was also called heavenly stone because of the connection with life after ******. A stone used as an azure ‘star map’, the road sign for the soul of the deceased. The Nemes headdress of the ****** mask shows the combination of gold and lapis lazuli as well as the contrast and agreement between life (gold-sun-life) and ****** (heavenly stone lapis lazuli). Life embraces ****** as expressed in the Nemes headdress as a ****** mask, which functions as a ******** card of the deceased one. A ******** card with the age of the deceased person in solar years. The Nemes as a ****** mask provides us with this information. 

It doesn’t matter if the depiction is a statue or a ****** mask. In both cases it marks the end of the earthly life, either with or without the false beard that decorates so often the depicture of the pharaoh. 

Image 2: The braid. (Public Domain), (

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The ancient Egyptians also used the solar year for the ******* the sun needed to return to the same point. An Ancient Egyptian year on the calendar begun with the flooding season of the Nile and counted, like in present times, three hundred and sixty-five days. 

The age of the deceased pharaoh is told through the number of rings (golden life rings) of the braid of the Nemes headdress (image 2). In the case of the ****** mask of Tut-Ankh-Amen the braid counts nineteen rings and that corresponds to his stay on earth in solar years. 

This can also easily be verified with other statues of pharaohs wearing the Nemes headdress with braids divided into rings. In Egyptology it is often not exactly known how old a pharaoh really became. 

Another example is the granite statue of pharaoh Thutmosis IV, to be found in the Louvre (Paris) of who is said he probably reached the age of thirty-three years. The braid of the Nemes headdress of this pharaoh counts thirty-two rings. 

 Image 3: Thutmosis IV. (

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This method may shine a different light on the chronology of Ancient Egypt and the life of the pharaohs and deserves further examination. Unfortunately only few pictures have been taken from the backside of statues or ****** masks and that shows us that we, in our current society, literally and figuratively are limited in our observation. It is the difference between looking and really seeing. 

Top image: Egyptian sarcophagus of Pharaoh Tutankhamun isolated on ****** background. Source: 

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By Willem Witteveen







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pharaoh, Mask, tutankhamen, thutmosis, Ancient Egypt, Egyptian Artifacts
#Crowns #Pharaohs #Missing #Artifacts #Artistic #Symbols #Divinity

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