Taweret amulet
- Accession Number
- AB11
- Current Location
- House of Death (ground floor), Amulets case
- Object Type
- Jewellery, Amulet
- Period
- Late Period
- Dynasty
- Twenty-sixth Dynasty
- Material
- Faience
- Provenance
- Egypt, Abydos
- Measurements
- Height: 35mm | Width: 10mm | Depth: 12mm
- Number of Elements
- 1
- Animal
- Hippopotamus
- Divine Name
- Taweret
Licensing details
This image may be used under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. For uses not covered under the Creative Commons license, or to license images for commercial uses,
please contact the Egypt Centre.
- Description
-
This standing faience amulet of Taweret has a suspension loop at the top. Taweret was a goddess who took the form of a hippopotamus, and protected women in childbirth. This example is probably from Abydos. The object was gifted to the University of Wales, Aberystwyth by John Bancroft Willans, a subscriber of the Egypt Exploration Fund/Society, who received the object in 1903. It was subsequently gifted to the Egypt Centre in 1997.
- Other Identity
- 23 (Margaret Murray list)
- Previous Owners
- Egypt Exploration Society | John Bancroft Willans (1881–1957) | University of Wales, Aberystwyth
- Acquisition
- Gift, The University of Wales, Aberystwyth (24 Mar 1997)
- Last modified: 02 Nov 2020