The Shabaka Stone, a relic from the …

Years: 717BCE - 706BCE

The Shabaka Stone, a relic from the Nubian Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt, is a stone slab measuring sixty-six centimeters in height and one hundred and thirty-seven centimeters in width and is incised with the surviving hieroglyphs of a worm-ridden, decaying papyrus.

This papyrus was found as the pharaoh Shabaka was inspecting the temple of Ptah in Memphis, Egypt.

Concerned about the loss of the information on the papyrus, Shabaka had the rest of the text written into this stone.

However, in later years, the stone will be used as a millstone and some of its hieroglyphics damaged.

Nevertheless, it has been a fruitful source of insight into the culture and religious doctrines of the ancient Egyptians.

The Shabaka Stone is also noteworthy in that it places Ptah, known as the patron of craftsmen, as the center of existence and as the creator god.

It is the principal surviving source of the Memphite theology in Ancient Egyptian culture, the teachings of which, ascribed to Menes, bring all local and former mythological traditions to their theological goal in the god Ptah, who created everything from notions that were in his heart and were then pronounced by his tongue.

All things—the universe, living beings, justice, beauty, and so on—were created in this fashion.

The gods were also created in this way; springing forth first as Ptah’s mental concepts, they entered into the material forms of the world—stone, metal, wood—that Ptah had equally created.

The creation myth associated with Ptah is more abstract than those of the pre-dynastic period, and testifies to the sophistication of the Memphite priesthood.

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