mercoledì 25 gennaio 2017

[#1] Egyptian amulet: faience papyrus

Egyptian amulet: faience papyrus

Egypt, Late Dynastic Period, 663 - 404 BC

Material: faience


Size: 3.6 x 0.9 cms


Collection: Italian private collection (acquired from a Dutch art gallery in 2017 - before part of a Dutch collecion formed in the 1990s)



The owner guarantees that this item has been acquired and hold in a legal way.




Typical Egyptian faience papyrus amulet belonging to the Late Period. The hole on the top suggests it was used as a pendant.

Papyrus amulets were very common amulets in the ancient Egypt. They are often made in faience or lapis lazuli with a color range shifting from green to blue. The papyrus amulets symbolized youthful force and vitality.



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lunedì 16 gennaio 2017

[#0] Egyptian amulet: cornelian scarab

Egyptian amulet: cornelian scarab 

Egypt, Late Dynastic Period, 600 - 500 BC

Material: cornelian


Size: 1.1 x 0.8 cms


Collection: Italian private collection (acquired from an Italian art gallery in 2016)


The owner guarantees that this item has been acquired and hold in a legal way.



Egyptian cornelian scarab amulet belonging to the Late Period. The carving on the top surface outlines the head, the chest and the elytra. The bottom oval surface is devoid of epigraphs. The longitudinal hole suggests his use by the living, for beauty and protection purposes.

Scarabs were among the most common amulets in the ancient Egypt. They symbolized the god Ra and the cycle of death and rebirth. They were used both by the living (such as this cornelian scarab) and the dead (such as the "Heart Scarab" highly important in the ritual of mummification).







giovedì 12 gennaio 2017

The ancient Egyptian amulets

Credits: ynetnews.com
The amulets were one of the most widespread tools in the ancient Egypt. They had both a aesthetic and religious importance.


Scarabs, papyri, gods and animals were the most used amulets in ancient Egypt. At first they were used only in funerery rituals but then they started to be used also as protection against illnesses and wild animals.





The material was truly important. Different features corresponded to different materials.

GOLD: was tha most valuable metal, symbol of the Sun and the god Ra.

SILVER: symbol of purity whose meaning was linked to the Moon.

LAPIS LAZULI: symbol of the water and youthful vitality.

RED SEMIPRECIOUS STONES (cornelian, jasper, coral): symbolized the blood and the cycle of life and death (with important liks with the rebirth)







The most common Egyptian amulets were:


SCARAB

Scarabs are undoubtedly the most used amulet in ancient Egypt. They were worn both by the livind and the mummies, in particular a scarab amulet called "the Heart Scarab" was put on the dead's chest during the process of mummification. The scarab symbolized the god Ra and the cycle of death and rebirth.

A cornelian scarab is in our Virtual Museum.







Risultati immagini per horus eye white amuletHORUS EYE (WEDJAT)

The Horus eye was very common in ancient Egypt. 
Two types had two different meanings:
- right-looking and white: symbolized the Sun and the god Ra;
- left-looking and black: symbolized the Moon and the god Osiris.

A Wedjat amulet is in our Virtual Museum.






PAPYRUS

The papyrus amulet was worn both by living and dead. It was often green or blue (the most common materials were Egyptian faience and lapis lazuli) and symbolized vitality and youthful force.


papyrus amulet is in our Virual Museum.








ANKH CROSS

It is one of the most important symbol af the ancient Egypt. The Ankh (or the cross of the life) was the direct symbol of life and rebirth. It was often with the dead and drove him in the voyage to the afterlife but also used as a pendant.







FROG

The frog was a sacred animal in Egyptian culture, it was linked to the creation of the world.
Wearing a frog amulet was thought to give fertility.











BES

The god Bes was a grotesque dwarf. Its amulets protected the homes from evil eye and evil spirits. The god Bes was also the protector of all the dancers, the pregnant women ad the babies.