The flower business | The Wild Bunch. Frenetic, competitive, multifarious, filthy and beautiful: the flower business is an emblem of Manhattan. Economist, Dec 20, 2014.
www.economist.com/news/christmas ... ful-flower-business
Note:
(1) "THE Temple of Dendur was built on the Nile in 15BC by the emperor Augustus for the goddess Isis of Philae. Its ruin now sits in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, in an atrium bathed in light from Central Park. Today, at the paws of a Sphinx staring out towards Long Island, there is mayhem."
(a) Temple of Dendur
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Dendur
(of sandstone; section 2 Relocation)
(b) Isis
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isis
("The name Isis means 'Throne.' Her headdress is a throne. As the personification of the throne, she was an important representation of the pharaoh's power. The pharaoh was depicted as her child, who sat on the throne she provided. Her cult was popular throughout Egypt, but her most important temples were at Behbeit El-Hagar in the Nile delta, and, beginning in the reign with Nectanebo I (380–362 BCE), on the island of Philae in Upper Egypt")
(c)
(i) Philae
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philae
(an island in Lake Nasser; [actually:] "It [Philae] was, as the plural name indicates, the appellation of two small islands * * * Despite being the smaller island, Philae proper was, from the numerous and picturesque ruins formerly there, the more interesting of the two")
(ii) For pronunciation, see
www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/philae
(d) sphinx
Gallery 131 - The Temple of Dendur in The Sackler Wing Part of Egyptian Art. Met, undated
www.metmuseum.org/visit/museum-map/galleries/egyptian/131
(Sphinx of Hatshepsut: “This colossal sphinx portrays the female pharaoh Hatshepsut with the body of a lion and a human head wearing a nemes headcloth and royal beard. * ** It was one of at least six granite sphinxes that stood in Hatshepsut's mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri”)
(i) headgear “nemes”
(A) nemes
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemes
(B) I can not find any dictionary that contains the word. So its etymology and pronunciation are unknown to me.
(ii) beard
(A) Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eighteenth_Dynasty_of_Egypt
("Hatshepsut. Daughter of Thutmose I, she ruled jointly as her stepson Thutmose III's co-regent. She soon took the throne for herself, and declared herself pharaoh. While there may have been other female rulers before her, she is the only one who used the symbolic beard")
(B) pharaoh
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharaoh
(section 1 Title origin; section 4.1 Khat and nemes headdresses; legend to illustration 1: After Djoser [a pharaoh's name] of the third dynasty, pharaohs were usually depicted wearing the nemes headdress, a false beard, and an ornate kilt)
(C) Fragment of the Beard of the Great Sphinx; From Giza, Egypt; Perhaps New Kingdom, 14th century BC. British Museum, undated
www.britishmuseum.org/explore/hi ... beard_of_the_g.aspx
("The sphinx takes the form of a lion's body with a royal head, symbolizing the immense power of the king. The fragment shows the beard to have been of the plaited, 'divine' type, depicted on gods and the dead, rather than kings and the living (see an example on the sarcophagus of Sasobek, also in The British Museum). However, it is doubtful whether it would have had a beard when first carved in about 2550 BC; it was probably added during restoration work in the Eighteenth Dynasty (about 1550-1295 BC), and fell off in antiquity")
(D) Egyptian Pharaoh, Penn Museum, undated
www.penn.museum/documents/educat ... evisit_combined.pdf
("Cleopatra VII [69-30 BC; reign 51-30 BC] was the last" pharaoh; page 2: "Have you noticed that pharaohs always have a beard? This is called false beard. In real-life, most Egyptian men [in ancient times] were clean shaven, but pharaohs, even the females ones, wore fake beards. Usually the beards were plaited like a big braid. No one is really sure why the ancient egyptian pharaohs did this, but it somehow connected the pharaoh to the gods")
(e)
(i) Deir el-Bahri
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deir_el-Bahari
(Arabic, literally meaning, "The Northern Monastery;" in the present-day city of Luxor)
(ii) Luxor
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxor
(the site of the Ancient Egyptian city of Thebes; section 1 Etymology)
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