The Mendesian stela of Iuput II is dated to his 21st year. Other monuments or objects from his reign include "a statue-base of Usimare Setepenamun, Iuput Meryamun Si-Bast from
Tell el Yahudieh, a glazed plaque (
see picture) now in the
Brooklyn Museum, and a
bronze door-hinge...from
Tell Moqdam (Leontopolis) bearing identical titles of the king along with [a] mention of the
Chief Queen, Tent-kat [...] and some obscure epithets."
Iuput II's archaising plaque The Brooklyn Museum plaque is peculiar because it depicts Iuput II in a style which differs a lot from the standards of the Third Intermediate Period: instead of having a long-legged, slender figure, Iuput is shorter and more muscular, a proportion which is reminiscent of the
Old Kingdom art. For this reason, the plaque has been considered proof that the archaising tendencies which were believed to have originated in Nubia and spread in Egypt during the
25th Dynasty, are in fact earlier and originating from the Delta, with Kushite (and later
Saite) artists merely adopting an already existing trend. ==References==