![]() Figure of the king, represented kneeling on a pedestal offering two pots (probably to be understood as containing wine), held symmetrically one in each hand. The piece. which was finely carved and finished, is remarkably well preserved with hardly a blemish on its carefully polished surface. The king is shown wearing the shendyt-kilt with a broad, banded belt and the nerves-headdress with Uraeus. its tail winding hack in several loops to the crown of the king's head. The pedestal is roughly rectangular with a slightly rounded front. At the rear a narrow rectangular pillar extends to a point about halfway up the king's back, where it meets the queue of the Nemes. Consolidating their rule, the Egyptian pharaohs of the mid-18th Dynasty embarked on a substantial programme of building throughout Nubia. which included the renovation of existing structures. The largely mud-brick temple of Kumma, a foundation of Queen Hatshepsut and Thutmose III. dedicated to the ram-headed Khnum chief god of the cataract region, was rebuilt and enlarged by Thutmose III's successor Amenhotep II, using sandstone blocks. The Khartoum figure appears to have been one of a group of such statues of the king set up in the temple. |