Ancient Egypt Lion Obelisk 3d Model

Ancient Egypt Lion Obelisk 3d Model 3D model

Description

Obelisks were prominent in the architecture of the ancient Egyptians, and played a vital role in their religion placing them in pairs at the entrance of the temples. The word obelisk as used in English today is of Greek rather than Egyptian origin because Herodotus, the Greek traveler, was one of the first classical writers to describe the objects. A number of ancient Egyptian obelisks are known to have survived, plus the unfinished obelisk found partly hewn from its quarry at Aswan. These obelisks are now dispersed around the world, and fewer than half of them remain in Egypt.

The earliest temple obelisk still in its original position is the 68-foot (20.7 m) 120-metric-ton (130-short-ton)[8] red granite Obelisk of Senusret I of the Twelfth Dynasty at Al-Matariyyah in modern Heliopolis.[9]

In Egyptian mythology, the obelisk symbolized the sun god Ra, and during the religious reformation of Akhenaten it was said to have been a petrified ray of the Aten, the sundisk. Benben was the mound that arose from the primordial waters Nu upon which the creator god Atum settled in the creation story of the Heliopolitan creation myth form of Ancient Egyptian religion. The Benben stone (also known as a pyramidion) is the top stone of the Egyptian pyramid. It is also related to the obelisk.

It is hypothesized by New York University Egyptologist Patricia Blackwell Gary and Astronomy senior editor Richard Talcott that the shapes of the ancient Egyptian pyramid and obelisk were derived from natural phenomena associated with the sun (the sun-god Ra being the Egyptians' greatest deity at that time).[10] The pyramid and obelisk's significance have been previously overlooked, especially the astronomical phenomena connected with sunrise and sunset: Zodiacal light and sun pillars respectively

.....................An obelisk (/ˈɒbəlɪsk/; from Ancient Greek: ὀβελίσκος obeliskos;[1][2] diminutive of ὀβελός obelos, spit, nail, pointed pillar[3]) is a tall, four-sided, narrow tapering monument which ends in a pyramid-like shape or pyramidion at the top.[4] Originally constructed by Ancient Egyptians and called tekhenu, the Greeks used the Greek term obeliskos to describe them, and this word passed into Latin and ultimately English.[5] Though William Thomas used the term correctly in his Historie of Italie of 1549, by the late sixteenth century (after reduced contact with Italy following the excommunication of Queen Elizabeth), Shakespeare failed to distinguish between pyramids and obelisks in his plays and sonnets.[6] Ancient obelisks are monolithic and consist of a single stone; most modern obelisks are made of several stones.[7]

robinson17
robinson172024-02-26 20:12:00 UTC
Awesome work......
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Ancient Egypt Lion Obelisk 3d Model
$36.00
 
Royalty Free License 
Ancient Egypt Lion Obelisk 3d Model
$36.00
 
Royalty Free License 
Response 90% in 0.9h
3D Modeling
Low-poly Modeling
Lighting
Rendering
Texturing
Animating

3D Model formats

Format limitations
  • Substance Painter 9.1 (.spp, .sbsar, .spsm)102 MBVersion: 9.1Renderer: Iray 9.1
  • OBJ (.obj, .mtl) (2 files)13.5 MBVersion: 1.5Version: 1.5
  • Autodesk FBX 7.5 (.fbx)58.1 MB
  • Cinema 4D 2024 (.c4d)5.35 MBVersion: 2024Renderer: Default 2024
  • 3D Studio 1.5 (.3ds)4.01 MB
  • Collada 1.5 (.dae)11 MB

3D Model details

  • Publish date2024-02-12
  • Model ID#5089705
  • Animated
  • Rigged
  • VR / AR / Low-poly
  • PBR
  • Geometry Polygon mesh
  • Polygons 73,090
  • Vertices 73,090
  • Textures
  • Materials
  • UV Mapping
  • Unwrapped UVs Unknown
  • Plugins used
  • Ready for 3D Printing
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