The crown of Arsinoë II. The creation and development of an imagery of authority
Abstract
This study deals with a unique crown that was created for Queen Arsinoë II. The aim is to identify and understand the symbolism that is embedded in each pictorial detail that together form the crown and how this reflects the wearer’s socio-political and religious positions. The study focuses on the crown and its details, while also including all contextual aspects of the relief scenes in order to understand the general meaning. This crown was later developed and usurped by other female figures; the material includes 158 Egyptian relief scenes dating from Arsinoë’s lifetime to Emperor Trajan, c. 400 years. In order to show the development of the crown’s symbolism, this work includes a large number of later scenes depicting the Egyptian goddess Hathor wearing a crown almost identical to Arsinoë’s.
The results of this study suggest that the crown of Arsinoë was created for the living queen and reflected three main cultural positions: her royal position as King of Lower Egypt, her cultic role as high priestess, and her religious aspect as thea Philadelphos. It indicates that she was proclaimed female pharaoh during her lifetime, and that she was regarded the female founder of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. The results of the study of the later material suggest that the later Hathoric crown was created in a time of political instability, when Ptolemy IV needed to emphasise his ancestry – underlining his lineage from Arsinoë II and Ptolemy II. The comprehensive study of the contextual pictorial setting indicates that this is a plausible explanation: the crown of Arsinoë became a symbol of authority worthy of continuation.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Arts
Institution
Department of Historical Studies ; Institutionen för historiska studier
Disputation
Lördagen den 20 november 2010, kl. 13.00, Stora Hörsalen, Humanisten, Renströmsgatan 6, 405 30 Göteborg.
Date of defence
2010-11-20
maria.nilsson@class.gu.se
mia_n1@hotmail.com
Date
2010-10-29Author
Nilsson, Maria
Keywords
Arsinoë
crowns
Ptolemaic
reliefs
Egyptian art
Egyptian religion
symbolism
female pharaohs
Hathor
God's wife
Edfu
Philae
Dendera
relative scaling
relative placement
concepts of time
post-colonial theory
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
Language
eng