Louis de Clercq, a Passion for the Levant: Selected Objects from his Collection at the Louvre Museum

Louis de Clercq, a Passion for the Levant: Selected Objects from his Collection at the Louvre Museum

Auteurs

  • Daniela Galazzo Associate member, Équipe Mondes pharaoniques de l’UMR 8167 Sorbonne Université Paris IV

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.19282/rsf.53.2025.02

Mots-clés :

Louis de Clercq, Aegyptiaca, Bronzes, Amulets, Egypt, Levant

Résumé

The Louis de Clercq Collection, housed in the Department of Egyptian Antiquities at the Louvre Museum, comprises objects made of a range of materials, including bronze, stone, marble, and faience, as well as a number of scarabs and scaraboids. These items derive from a group of antiquities assembled in the Levant during the second half of the 19th century by Louis de Clercq, a French politician and antiquities collector. This article provides a brief overview of the history of the collection and examines a selection of bronze and stone objects as iconographic and material evidence for cultural exchanges and interactions between Egypt and the Levant during the 1st millennium BCE.

Publiée

2026-07-01
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