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Plaque Inscribed for Amunhotep II, ca. 1426-1400 B.C.E.. Faience, Other (average): 3 1/8 x 9/16 x 5 11/16 in. (8 x 1.4 x 14.5 cm). Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 36.619.3. Creative Commons-BY.
In addition to commissioning new buildings, Egyptian kings occasionally claimed existing structures such as temples or palaces as their own.
The most common way for a king to do this was to substitute his own name for that of the original builder in the inscriptions. When a king commissioned a new structure, he buried objects in the four corners of the foundation to be certain that the gods would remember the true builder and that later kings could not find and reinscribe them. These so-called foundation deposits usually included plaques with the king’s name, as well as models of objects used to erect the building, such as grinders, hoes, and rockers needed to move large stones.