Statue of Priestess Karumama
Statue of Priestess Karumama 1---125
The largest statue in the world of a woman, carved from gold and inlaid with bronze, dating back to about 870 BC. It was discovered in Karnak and is preserved in the Louvre Museum
She may be the same Karumama, daughter of Pharaoh Osorkon II, who was depicted in the Sed Hall. Hanut Tawi-d followed her as high priestess. Her bronze statue, the Statue of Karumama, Devotee of the Divine Amun (N 500) is now on display in the Louvre; She also has a votive statue of Maat that she received from him in Karnak, and she has a painting, utensils, and canopic vessels in Berlin. Shepenupet I followed her as wife of Amun and her tomb was found in December 2014 in the area of the Ramesseum temple in Thebes.
First identified as the wife of Pharaoh Takelot II by Jean-François Champollion, who acquired it in 1829, the statue actually represents the daughter of Osorkon I, a priestess associated with Cromama, herself a priestess of the god Amun-Ra.



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