Czére Andrea szerk.: A Szépművészeti Múzeum közleményei 105. (Budapest, 2006)
ÉVA LIPTAY: Between Heaven and Earth II: The Iconography of a Funerary Papyrus from the Twenty-First Dynasty (Part II)
the eternal cycle of the sun (nhh) and the rebirth of the mummy lying in the coffin. The figure of the great cosmic creator links sky and earth, day and night, death and life with each other, assuring in this way that the endless cycle would not stop and the bl of the deceased would participate in it in the company of the god. Eva Liptay is Head of the Egyptian Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest NOTES ' E. Liptay, "Between Heaven and Earth II. The iconography of a funerary papyrus from the Twentyfirst Dynasty", Bulletin du Musée Hongrois des Beaux-Arts 104 (2006), 35-61. 2 F. Guilmant, Le tombeau de Ramses IX (Mémoires de r Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale du Caire 15), Cairo 1907, pl. LXIII; J. G Darnell, The Enigmatic Netherworld Books of the Solar-Osirian unity. Cryptographic Compositions in the Tombs of Tut ankh am un, Ramesses VI and Ramesses IX (Orbis ßiblicus et Orientalis 198), Fribourg and Göttingen 2004, pl. 31; Liptay 2006, fig. 3. 3 Liptay 2006, 45-50. 4 The papvrus of Herüben: A. Piankoff and N. Rambova, Mythological Papyri (Ancient Egyptian Religious Texts and Representations 3), New York 1957, no. 2 (Herüben B); the papyrus of Henuttawi: Darnell 2004, pi. 42; Liptay 2006, fig. 4. ( )n the vignette of BD 110: J. S. ( iesellensetter, Das Sechet-Jaru. Untersuchungen zur Vignette {les Kapitels 110 im Ägyptischen Totenbuch (Diss.), Würzburg 1997, www.opus.bibliothek.uni-wuerzburg.de; on the snake-headed barque (ddft-imyt-ilt-nt): Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen VII (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 116), hrsg. von Ch. Leitz, Leuven, Paris, and Dudley, MA 2002, 687. 6 Fr. Abitz, Baugeschichte und Dekoration des Grabes Ramses' VI. (Orbis Biblicas et Orientalis 89), Freiburg and Göttingen 1989, 150-54; A. Piankoff and N. Rambova, The Tomb of Rainesses VI (Ancient Egyptian Religious Texts and Representations 1), New York 1954, I, fig. 139. The scene had been adopted in the Twenty-first Dynasty as well: Piankoff and Rambova 1957, no. 19. * E. Hornung, "Eine aenigmatische Wand im Grabe Ramses' IX", in Form und Mass (Ägypten und Altes Testament 12), ed J. Osing and G. Dreyer, Wiesbaden 1987, 226-37; Darnell 2004, 327-28; Liptay 2006, 44-45. 9 Darnell 2004, pi. 42; Liptay 2006, fig. 4. '" Piankoff and Rambova 1957, no. 2; similarly to the scarab approaching the hand of the ithyphallic god in the tomb of Ramesses IX: Guilmant 1907, pl. LXXVII; Darnell 2004, pi. 36; Liptay 2006, fig. 3.