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REFERENCE: EA2134

An Egyptian Faience 'Red Crown' Amulet, Late Period, ca. 664 - 332 BCE

Sale price500 USD

This object qualifies for free USA shipping and a flat rate fee of $60 if shipping internationally.

 Of green faience, depicting the Red Crown of Lower Egypt, shaped in a low cylinder with a tall back spike and an uncurling spiral projected at the front, connected by a filled-in outline, with a hole drilled for attachment. 

Interestingly, aside from a few early examples carved from carnelian, amulets of this type are usually of green glazed composition. These amulets are considered ones of power, as the crown would only have been worn by the pharaoh and certain deities, so such amulets, when placed on the mummy of a commoner, would imbue them with the same aura of power and authority as the pharaoh or deity.  

For a very similar example see:  Boston Museum of Fine Arts, accession #57.504

Ref: Carol Andrews, Amulets of Ancient Egypt, London: British Museum Press (1994) p. 75

Dimensions: Length: 2 cm (0.78 inches)

Condition: Intact and in very good condition overall.

Provenance: Private collection of Geoffrey Metz, Egyptologist, Sweden. Metz catalogue number M875.

An Egyptian Faience 'Red Crown' Amulet, Late Period, ca. 664 - 332 BCE
An Egyptian Faience 'Red Crown' Amulet, Late Period, ca. 664 - 332 BCE Sale price500 USD