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  1. God's Wife Tagerem, daughter of the priest Imhotep. Ptolemaic Period. 300–250 B.C. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 131. The priestess Tagerem was God's Wife of the god Re in Sakhebu in the southwestern Delta, a temple functionary of special order, intimate of the god.

  2. 21 de oct. de 2011 · The Priestess Tagerem. Mark. October 21, 2011. Museums / NYC. Statue of The Priestess Tagerem displayed within the Temple of Dendur in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The statue depicts a priestess who served at a different temple, and would not have been displayed in a temple sanctuary. Tags: Manhattan, New York, NYC.

  3. The Priestess Tagerem - The Metropolitan Museum of Art This section completes portions one and four of the art unit project. The Priestess Tagerem: Inside the magnificent Temple of Dendur, behind a glass case, stood this broken statue.

  4. 2 de dic. de 2023 · Priestesses Among Few Women With Status and Power in Ancient Greece. By Patricia Claus. December 2, 2023. Life for women in most city-states of Ancient Greece was not very easy, but priestesses had powers that gave them high status. By the Varrese Painter, ca. 340 BC, from Apulia.

  5. A Fragmentary Egyptian Limestone Figure of the Priestess Tagerem, Ptolemaic Period, reign of Ptolemy I/Ptolemy II, 304-256 B.C. Estimate. 25,000 - 35,000 USD. Log in to view results. bidding is closed.

  6. God's Wife Tagerem, or Priestess Tagerem 300-250 B.C., Ptolemaic Period Egypt, Western Delta, Sakhebu (Zat el-Kom) Limestone The priestess Tagerem was God's Wife of the god Re in Sakhebu in the southwestern Delta, a temple functionary of special order, intimate of the god.

  7. The Temple of Dendur. Roman Period. completed by 10 B.C. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 131. Egyptian temples were not simply houses for a cult image but also represented, in their design and decoration, a variety of religious and mythological concepts.