Ancient Egyptian faience amulet of the goddess Isis with Horus.

The goddess depicted seated on her throne with her son on her lap, wearing a tripartite wig surmounted by her crown composed of a solar disk and lotus buds framed by cow horns.

Pierced or suspension.

Size: 2,5 cm

Period: Late Period, c. 664 – 332 B.C.

Material: Faience

Provenance: Collection Dos and Bertie Winkel

Price: € 550,—

Small green carved figure of a seated woman with one leg crossed over the other, holding her chin in her hand, carved from stone or jade.
Ancient green stone figurine of a seated figure with a large, triangular headdress, holding an object in its lap, on a gradient gray background.
Ancient carved green stone figurine of a seated figure, possibly a deity or person, with a distinctive headdress, facing left.

For the ancient Egyptians, the goddess Isis was the model of the loyal wife and mother, as well as a powerful magician. She was the wife of the god Osiris and the mother of Horus. Just as the king of Egypt was associated with Horus in life and Osiris in death. The crown composed of a sun-disk and cow horns originally belonged to Hathor, but was assimilated by Isis.

A further association with funerary religion is Isis’s role as protector of one of the four sons of Horus, the deities who protected the internal organs removed during the mummification process and placed in containers known as canopic jars. The heads of the gods Hapy, Imsety, Qebehsenuef and Duamutef decorated the lids of these containers. Each of these gods was protected by a goddess. Isis watched over Imsety, the human-headed god, while Nephthys, Neith and Selket guarded the others.