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One of the more interesting pieces at the Brooklyn Museum is the model of a temple gateway, commissioned by Seti I. Between my photos and those of the webmistress of the now defunct setsightings.com, we can have a fairly thorough examination of this piece, for they captured it with different angles and under different light conditions than I did.
(Also see the museum website for more view angles) I decided to seek out more info on the temple model, and Peter Brand's _Monuments of Seti I_ came to my aid.
"This celebrated piece is the base of a 'model' temple of Seti I from
Heliopolis. It was found at Tell el-Yahudia by fellahin sometime
before 1875 and eventually acquired by the Brooklyn Museum. Only the base of
the model is preserved, bearing sockets that once held now missing elements of
a gateway with statuary and obelisks for a pylon gateway of Seti I. Badawy
developed a largely plausible reconstruction of these lost architectural
elements."("Catalog of Monuments", page 143)
The Brooklyn Museum has the reconstruction Brand speaks of and I have a very fuzzy photo of it:
![]() You can barely make out two sphinxes, two obelisks and the statuary... Plaster, 40 5/16 x 34 7/16 x 44 1/8 in. (102.4 x 87.5 x 112 cm) 66.228, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund
"It is unfortunate that the texts on the model's base nowhere give the official
name of the proposed structure. In fact, the bandeau texts describing it are
somewhat vague. The inscription on its right side does list the individual
elements of the models, but only so as to catalogy the materials of which its
various parts, and not the actual building, were made. The left bandeau text
describes the monument as an 'August sanctuary,' shm špss, which
seems to be a generic term meaning 'shrine/sanctuary'.
"Only one part of Seti's projected pylon gateway and forecourt can be
identified with any degree of certainty, namely the Flaminian obelisk. As of
yet, no trace of the pylon itself, or of the colossal statues or sphinxes that
might have stood in front of it, have been found."("Catalog of Monuments", page 145)
It's quite a mystery. Perhaps Seti I died before he could make this temple a reality. If that's the case, some of his plans may have been preserved in a slightly different form, as Brand explains:
"The side walls at the back of the model may represent a court similar to the Ramsesside court at Luxor Temple. In fact, the building represented by the Brooklyn model is strikingly close in design to that of the Luxor forecourt. This is perhaps more significant now that the latter appears to have been planned and partially constructed late in Seti I's reign."
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(From Museum website: "The decoration depicts Seti in a standard, expressive pose of offering before each of the three gods to whom he is dedicating the model."("Khepri (the rising sun), Re-Horakhty (the risen sun), and Atum (the setting sun)."
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