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Your Name in Egyptian Hieroglyphics

© Copyright 1999, Jim Loy

Occasionally, someone asks me to draw his/her name into a cartouche. Here's one for Tutankhamun (he was very appreciative):

Tutankhamon

Most kings had two main names. The above says, "Ruler of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebkheperura, Son of Ra, Tutankhamun." Within an Egyptian name, the name of a god is shown first, but may be said last. So Tutankhamun is spelled with "Amun" first, and Nebkheperura is spelled with "Ra" first. The last three signs are abbreviations for "ruler of Lower and Upper Egypt."

I tell people that only kings (and sometimes queens and high priests) had their names in cartouches. So it is not authentic to have your name in a cartouche, unless you are a king. But it is authentic to spell out your name using the Egyptian Hieroglyphic Alphabet. Here is a table, showing the western alphabet alongside the "equivalent" Egyptian signs, as a GIF file. Below that is some commentary on each letter, followed by three JPEG files. If you have Netscape or Internet Explorer, you should be able to download either graphic file by right clicking on the picture, and choosing "Save Image As..." Then use a paint program to spell out your name. Please try it yourself.

yourname.gif

Comments:

Often a person's name was followed by a sign showing that the name is not just some obscure Egyptian word, and that he or she was a man or a woman:

man.gif

So there you have it.


Here are three JPEGs of the above two GIFs:

yournam1.jpg

yournam2.jpg

man.jpg

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