Bull (ka hieroglyph)
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Bull ka in hieroglyphs |
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The ancient Egyptian Bull (hieroglyph), Gardiner sign listed no. E1, is the representation of the common bull. The bull motif is dominant in protodynastic times (see Bull Palette), and also has prominence in the early dynastic Egypt, famously on the Narmer Palette.
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The common definition of bull (as a hieroglyph for language), as ka, relates to the 'bull'; other uses with additional hieroglyphs are: divine bull, "Great Bull", "Red Bull", etc.[1]
Palermo Stone usage, 2390 BC
The bull (hieroglyph) figures prominently in the Palermo Stone of the 24th to 23rd century BC, (the annals and history of the previous ~700 years, ~3200 to 2280 BC). It has two motifs in the Palermo text, one being the "cattle count", a repeated theme for discussing a 'year-event' of an individual Pharaoh. The other theme using the bull (hieroglyph), is the recording of the Running of the Bull (the Apis Bull), for example "first 'running of the bull' ".
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bull (hieroglyph). |
References
- ↑ Budge, 1991. A Hieroglyphic Dictionary to the Book of the Dead, p. 406-7.
Further reading
- Budge, (1920), 1978. An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary, E.A.Wallace Budge, (Dover Publications), c 1978, (c 1920), Dover edition, 1978. (In two volumes, 1314 pp. and cliv-(154) pp.) (softcover, ISBN 0-486-23615-3)
- Budge E.A.Wallace Budge, Dover edition, 1991; Original: c 1911 as: A Hieroglyphic Vocabulary to the Theban Recension of the Book of the Dead with an Index to All the English Equivalents of the Egyptian Words, (Kegan Paul, etc. Ltd, London, publisher). Dover: (softcover, ISBN 0-486-26724-5)