Garden Ornaments Inspired By Egypt From Haddonstone

Garden Ornaments Inspired By Egypt From HaddonstoneTutankhamen’s return to London has sparked a renewed fascination with the boy king and his age-old civilization.

Several designs in Haddonstone’s collection of garden ornaments have been influenced by ancient Egypt:

The Leazes Park Lions are thought to be inspired by The Red Granite Lion of Amenhotep III; it was one of a pair originally created around 1370BC to guard the Temple of Soleb in Sudan.

The lions were owned by a succession of rulers after Amenhotep III, including Tutankhamen (1336-1327 BC); Haddonstone’s versions were created for Leazes Park in Newcastle, and are now part of the company’s standard collection.

Both Grecian and Egyptian Sphinxes feature the body of a lion, with the Grecian version depicting an elegant female head and bosom, in contrast to the male head of the Egyptian style; both were popular in the late Georgian period.

Haddonstone has also faithfully replicated an original design created by Coade Stone; Egyptian in origin, obelisks were first brought to Rome, before becoming a decorative feature in the English landscape from the XVIII century onwards.

The European fascination with Egypt began with Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian Campaign in 1798, when the scholars who accompanied the soldiers, suddenly discovered the rich history of a forgotten, but important civilization.

The results of their comprehensive investigation of the country – both past and present – eventually became Description de l’Egypte, which spanned ten volumes when it was eventually published in 1830 and Egyptology was born.

Haddonstone’s full collection includes many pieces inspired by cultural and historical figures and events – in their inspirational 200-page catalogue, on CD-ROM or visit:

Web: http://www.haddonstone.com

Tel: (01604) 770711

Read more about: Garden Ornaments