At least two Ancient Egyptian granitic gneiss statues of Amun in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa were displayed at the Temple of Amun at Kawa in Nubia. Construction of the stone temple was started in 683 BC by the pharaoh Taharqa. The ram is one of the animals sacred to Amun, and several temples dedicated to Amun, including the one at Karnak featured ram or ram-headed sphinx statues.
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The rams were found by Professor Francis Llewellyn Griffith during his excavations at the temple in 1930-1. Two sets of paired sandstone bases, in front of the first and second pylons respectively, were found at the western approach to the stone temple, and figures of rams were found on two of them.[1] The pairing ram to the one at the British Museum is held at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, where many of the artefacts from the excavations at Kawa are held.[2] The British Museum's example was acquired in 1933 from Professor Griffith's Oxford Excavations in Nubia.[3]
The base of the statue is 1.63m long and 0.63m wide, and the statue is 1.06m high. The ram is lying on its stomach with its forelegs folded under it, and between them it protects a standing figure of King Taharqa. A hole in the top of the ram's head indicates where a gilded disk would originally have fitted. A hieroglyphic inscription runs round the sides of the plinth from front to back and proclaims Taharqa as the son of Amun and Mut, Lady of Heaven, 'who fully satisfies the heart of his father Amun'.[4][5] The British Museum's statue has the reference number EA 1779 and the accession number 1933,0610.1, and is displayed in Room 4 at the Museum.
In 2005 the then-writer-in-residence at the Ashmolean Museum, Chuma Nwokolo, Jr., wrote a poem inspired by the statue and other exhibits about Taharqa.[6] In 2009 the statue featured in advertisements for the Ashmolean that were displayed on the back of Oxford buses.[7]