Tin hotsell Hinan original watercolour

$190.00
#SN.148886
Tin hotsell Hinan original watercolour,

Original watercolour painting featuring Tin Hinan

The painting maesures 24x32 cm or 9.

Black/White
  • Eclipse/Grove
  • Chalk/Grove
  • Black/White
  • Magnet Fossil
12
  • 8
  • 8.5
  • 9
  • 9.5
  • 10
  • 10.5
  • 11
  • 11.5
  • 12
  • 12.5
  • 13
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Product code: Tin hotsell Hinan original watercolour

hotsell Original watercolour painting featuring Tin Hinan.

The painting maesures 24x32 cm or 9 1/2x12 1/2 in and is NOT framed. It will be sent in a protective plastic sleeve with a sturdy cardboard.

Painted on Windsor and Newton 300 g cold-pressed watercolour paper.

The price includes shipping per UPS, tracking number will be provided.

Tin Hinan

Tin Hinan is the name given by the Tuareg to a 4th-century queen and warrior woman of prestige whose monumental tomb is located in the Sahara at Abalessa in the Hoggar region of Algeria.
Tin Hinan is sometimes referred to as "Queen of the Hoggar", and by the Tuareg as Tamenukalt which also means "leader" or "queen". The name means literally "she of the tents", but may be metaphorically translated as "mother of the tribe" (or "of us all") or even "queen of the camp" (the "camp" maybe referring to the group of tombs which surround hers).

Not far from the oasis of Abalessa, Algeria, about 1,000 miles south of Algiers, a rounded hill rises about 125 ft above the junction of two wadis. The tomb of Tin Hinan is on the summit.

The tomb of Tin Hinan was opened by Byron Khun de Prorok with support from the French army in 1925.. It was found to contain the skeleton of a woman on a wooden litter, lying on her back with her head facing east. She was accompanied by heavy gold and silver jewellery, some of it adorned with pearls. On her right forearm she wore 7 silver bracelets, and on her left, 7 gold bracelets. Another silver bracelet and a gold ring were placed with the body. Remains of a complex piecework necklace of gold and pearls (real and artificial) were also present.

A number of funerary objects were also found.The tomb itself is constructed in a style that is widespread in the Sahara.

An anthropological study of the remains published in 1968 concluded the skeleton was that of a woman 1.72 to 1.76 metres tall, belonging to a Mediterranean race, who had probably never had children and who was probably lame because of deformation of the lumbar and sacral areas.

The Tuareg were well aware that the tomb contained a woman of prestige and a number of legends about her had long been in circulation before the tomb was opened. The 14th-century historian Ibn Khaldun recorded a legend about a lame queen named Tiski who was ancestral mother of the Ahaggar tribes, which is somewhat close to the archaeological record. In other legends less corroborated, Tin Hinan was believed to have been a Muslim of the Braber tribe of Berbers who came from Tafilalt oasis in the Atlas Mountains in the area of modern Morocco accompanied by a maidservant named Takamat. In this legend, Tin Hinan had a daughter (or granddaughter), whose name is Kella, while Takamat had two daughters. These children are said to be the ancestors of the Tuareg of the Ahaggar. Another version is that Tin Hinan had three daughters (who had totemic names referring to desert animals) who were the tribal ancestors.

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