Relief at Luxor.
The
Ancient Egyptian Cobra hieroglyph is
Gardiner sign listed no. I10 for the
cobra-at-rest. The
Cobra-enraged in defensive posture,
is the famous
pharaonic Uraeus, (portrayed with Gardiner's nos. I12, I13, G16, and other Gardiner unlisted varieties).
The cobra-at-rest hieroglyph is used in the Ancient Egyptian language hieroglyphs for the alphabetic consonant letter dj,[1] (a uniliteral, not an Egyptian biliteral).
Cobra, in hieroglyph word blocks
A variety of hieroglyph composition blocks use the space beneath the cobra-at-rest hieroglyph. In relief scene iconography, the pharaoh is often: "given life, power, dominion, ra-like, forever", in Egyptian: di ankh, usr, djed, ra-ma, djet.
Other example phrases below the cobra are the Egyptian word for "behold!", and the hieroglyph for "speech", or "word", the Gardiner hieroglyph S43, a 'walking stick', or 'cane'.
[2]
Palermo Stone, Djet Festival
In the 2392 BC Palermo Stone, (the 24th to 23rd century BC, the Royal Annals of the Old Kingdom, the previous 700 years, circa 3100-2400 BC), on the obverse of the Palermo Piece (at Palermo Museum, 1 of the 2 large pieces of the 7—piece Palermo Stone), the cobra-at-rest hieroglyph can be found in 4 locations. Two of them are described in the entire "King Year Record", the register-rectangle encompassing each Year Record. They record in Row II (of VI Rows), the (occurrence) "Year: (the) Time of the 1st Djet Festival", the (occurrence) "Year: (the) Time of the 2nd Djet Festival", is recorded in the following Row III, of Pharaoh, King Den. They appear as below: (the Gardiner font reads left-to-right)
(Time,of,First,,,Djet,Festival) |
(procession,determinative) |
|
(procession,determinative) |
|
Two other uses of the cobra-at-rest hieroglyph follow: in Row IV, Nynetjer's Year 20 record, and the 4th time in Row V.
Other hieroglyphs represent: "Time": Threshing floor-time (hieroglyph), and "First": Dagger (tp hieroglyph).
(Palermo Piece, obverse), Row V, 1st half.
(Note: reads right-to-left)
(note 2nd column (Year-register) on left)
The Egyptian hieroglyph alphabetic letters
The following two tables show the Egyptian uniliteral signs. (24 letters, but multiple use hieroglyphs)
a |
i (ee) |
y ii |
' ah, (aïn) |
w, (u) (oo) |
B |
P |
F |
M |
N |
R |
H1 |
H2 |
(Kh)1 |
(Kh)2 |
S |
Sh (Sh) |
K emphatic |
K |
G |
T |
Tj Ch Tsh |
D |
Dj |
(additionally 4 for vert/horiz) |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
M (horiz) M2-Plinth |
N (vert) (see: N (red crown)) |
S (vert) S (folded) cloth) |
|
|
M (3rd-M -2nd-vert) M3-Baker's tool (vertical) |
(additionally 3 for equivalents) |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
|
|
(2 |
reeds) |
|
is—
|
(2 |
strokes) |
|
y2-Two strokes |
|
(quail) |
|
is—
|
(coil) |
|
letter w, u (see w2-Coil) |
|
T (no. 2) T2-Pestle |
|
|
See also
References
- ↑ Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998. Illustrated Hieroglyphics Handbook, uniliteral: U5, ("Erect Cobra"), pp. 26-27.
- ↑ Betrò, 1995. Hieroglyphics: The Writings of Ancient Egypt, Walking stick, cane, p. 187.
- Betrò, 1995. Hieroglyphics: The Writings of Ancient Egypt, Betrò, Maria Carmela, c. 1995, 1996-(English), Abbeville Press Publishers, New York, London, Paris (hardcover, ISBN 0-7892-0232-8)
- Schumann-Antelme, and Rossini, 1998. Illustrated Hieroglyphics Handbook, Ruth Schumann-Antelme, and Stéphane Rossini, c 1998, English trans. 2002, Sterling Publishing Co. (Index, Summary lists (tables), selected uniliterals, biliterals, and triliterals.) (softcover, ISBN 1-4027-0025-3)