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Deutsch: Letzte datierbare Hieroglyphen (von Esmet-Achom, 24. August 394 n. Chr.) an der inneren Nordwand des Hadriantors neben dem Tempel von Philae auf der Insel Agilkia, ehemals auf der Insel Philae, Ägypten
English: A crude drawing of the god Mandulis from Hadrian's Gate at Philae, accompanied by a hieroglyphic inscription (above right) and a demotic inscription (lower right). The hieroglyphic text is the last one written in ancient times, and its author had a weak grasp of the writing system. The demotic inscription reads: "I, Nesmeterakhem, the Scribe of the House of Writings (?) of Isis, son of Nesmeterpanakhet the Second Priest of Isis, and his mother Eseweret, I performed work on this figure of Mandulis for all time, because he is fair of face towards me. Today, the Birthday of Osiris, his dedication feast, year 110 [of the reign of Diocletian]." The date is thus 24 August, 394 AD/CE. The hieroglyphic text says: "Before Mandulis son of Horus, by the hand of Nesmeterakhem, son of Nesmeter, the Second Priest of Isis, for all time and eternity. Words spoken by Mandulis, Lord of the Abaton, great god." (Source: Richard Parkinson, Cracking Codes: The Rosetta Stone and Decipherment (1999), p. 178.)
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Author Olaf Tausch
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Camera location24° 01′ 32.5″ N, 32° 53′ 02″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Captions

The Graffito of Esmet-Akhomz, an inscription from 394 A.D. that contains the last known hieroglyph written in ancient times It depicts the god Mandulis from Hadrian's Gate at Philae, alongside hieroglyphic (top) and demotic (bottom) inscriptions.

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20 October 2019

24°1'32.498"N, 32°53'2.000"E

24°1'32.49998"N, 32°53'2.00000"E

0.0025 second

19.43 millimetre

image/jpeg

14f68a634962fe009c8c6f8b80c99d91aa2a8a1e

18,217,312 byte

4,729 pixel

3,538 pixel

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current19:53, 5 May 2020Thumbnail for version as of 19:53, 5 May 20203,538 × 4,729 (17.37 MB)Oltau{{Information |Description={{de|1=Letzte datierbare Hieroglyphen (von Esmet-Achom, 24. August 394 n. Chr.) an der inneren Nordwand des Hadriantors neben dem Tempel von Philae auf der Insel Agilkia, ehemals auf der Insel Philae, Ägypten}} |Source={{own}} |Author=Olaf Tausch |Date=2019-10-20 |Permission={{self|GFDL|cc-by-3.0}} |other_versions= }} {{Location|24|01|32.5|N|32|53|02.0|E|region:EG_type:landmark_scale:10000_heading:}} Category:Graffito of Esmet-Akhom [[Catego...

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