Anonymous ID: bb131c July 20, 2019, 2:56 p.m. No.22004   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2012

>>21994

> What is that INSIDE the window? Looks like an apple logo above a box of kleenes, a brass alarm clock, and some lab equipment?

 

IMac, and some random stuff, glue, pens/pencils..

Anonymous ID: bb131c July 20, 2019, 3:11 p.m. No.22033   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22005

Island statue appears to have a flail (nekhakha), but no crook.

 

The flail was known as the nekhakha in Egyptian. It was a rod with three strands of beads attached to the top. Although historians cannot agree exactly what this was used for, there are two primary interpretations of its origin. The first is that it was a weapon used to defend a flock of sheep. In this interpretation, the flail represented the pharaoh's responsibility to establish the order (through punishment, if necessary) that was essential to sustaining society. The second interpretation is that the flail was used as an agricultural tool to thresh grain. In this interpretation, the flail represented the pharaoh's role in providing for the people of Egypt and protecting land that could grow food for the people. Together, the crook and flail were used to represent the two most important roles of the pharaoh.

 

https://study.com/academy/lesson/crook-flail-in-ancient-egypt-definition-symbolism.html

The earliest depictions of the royal crook and the royal flail were found separately, but the crook and flail later became nearly inseparable.