Egyptian Faience Amulet of Anubis

£ 475.00

An ancient Egyptian amulet made of turquoise-glazed faience, depicting the god Anubis. The deity is shown striding with his left leg forward, as he keeps his elongated arms stiff at his sides. Such a stance, known as the ‘left foot forward’ stance, is one of the oldest standing figure types in Ancient Egyptian art. Later adopted and developed in Ancient Greece, it set the basis for the evolution of dynamism in sculptural art. A royal, tripartite wig frames his zoomorphic face, flowing down his back into the pillar he rests against. There is a hole on the reverse for suspension.

Date: Circa 664-30 BC
Period: Late Period - Ptolemaic Period
Provenance: Ex English collection, AB, acquired 1920s-40, passed by descent.
Condition: Very fine. Rich glazing throughout. Some encrustation and loss of definition, consistent with age.
SKU: ES-318 Categories: , Tags: , ,

Anubis was an important deity within the Egyptian pantheon. He was represented as a canine-headed man, most likely a jackal. He was depicted from the Early Dynastic Period solely as a jackal. The association with the dead existed from this period,as Anubis was known as a protector of graves. Jackals were a common feature of Early Dynastic necropolis’s, whose shallow graves were frequently foraged by the wild animal. From the Old Kingdom, Anubis was the primary god associated with the afterlife, however this changed from the Middle Kingdom, when Osiris become more popular. Anubis however was still associated with the afterlife – he was the god of embalming bodies until the Middle Kingdom, and had an important role in the transition between life and death. He ushered souls into the afterlife, and tended to the weighing scale during the Weighing of the Heart Ceremony– which determined whether a soul would be allowed to enter the realm of the dead.

To discover more about amulets in the Ancient Egyptian world, please visit our relevant post: Amulets in Ancient Egypt.

Weight 1.8 g
Dimensions L 1.1 x W 0.5 x H 3 cm
Egyptian Mythology

Anubis

Faience

Turquoise Faience

Region

North Africa

Reference: For similar: The Metropolitan Museum, New York, item 04.2.151

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