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Artefact Collection

Item No
Length x Width x Height
Total
weight
Price
in AUD$
405P
20 x 17 x 6 cm
2.7 kg
275.00
7.9x 6.7 x 2.3 in 
 6 lb

 

I have created this collection of amulets, vignettes and portraits to appeal to the individuals who like something different. You have the choice between a collection painted with earth tone colors or the gold edition.

Featured in this collection are, centrally a miniature mummy mask of 19th dynasty King Rameses II flanked on either side by relief portraits of King Rameses and Queen Nefertari. Along the bottom register from left to right, appears the scarab beetle, Bast the cat goddess, the eye of Horus and the djed pillar of Osiris. As an extra surprise- the cartouches of Rameses and Nefertari are hidden within the collection.

 

The scarab beetle has recently gained notoriety being poorly misrepresented in movies as oversized flesh eating bugs that chase you through underground tomb chambers. This is of course a ridiculous flight of Hollywood fantasy. Scarabs are primarily vegetarian for a start. They perform the useful break down of animal dung, skilfully rolling it into globes much larger than their own bodies. To the ancient Egyptian it was an unusual visual occurrence in their natural world and they attached a spiritual significance to this. The scarab or "Kheperu" became deified as the one who pushed the sun up over the horizon each morning and became a symbol of rebirth and renewal. The symbolism of regeneration was also exemplified in the observation that the scarabs rolling globe would eventually hatch a new generation of beetles. The amulet in this collection is typical of the type that would have been bought in an ancient market and used as an amulet during life. It would also be included in the future burial to be placed on the heart region of the mummy to ensure rebirth in the next world. The ancients believed the heart was the centre of intelligence not the brain.

Bast cat goddess. Like many of the animal gods within the Egyptian pantheon it was initially the observation of behavioural patterns that could link the god to elemental or emotional characteristics. Thus Bast the domesticated cat which offered affection and strong mothering characteristics came into being. At one time she was known as the bringer of joy and associated with all manner of light hearted activities such as music and dance, assimilating many of the qualities of the love goddess Hathor. The separate but no less venerated aspect of this goddess was her hunting prowess. In a mythological sense she would sit on the bow of the solar barque of the sun god Ra smiting his enemies as they sailed through the twelve gates of night. Images of Bast clawing or cutting the serpent "Apep" are frequently depicted in papyrus scrolls. Her principal centre for worship was the city of Bubastis in the Nile delta which became the capital city during the 22nd dynasty when she was elevated to supreme god

The eye of Horus / Ra….. This was a potent amulet of protection and has nothing to do with the so called "evil eye" of a relatively more recent conception. When the stylised curl of the beneficent Egyptian eye faces right, it represents the sun and alternatively left signifies the moon. It is also known as the wadjet or udjet eye.

The Djed pillar….. Here is an amulet that was used to invoke strength and stability into your life. Variously interpreted as the spinal column of the god Osiris or alternatively his mythical carved wooden column. If you could not afford to buy a djed pillar or any other amulet for your burial, a simple drawing of the amulet on pieces of cloth or drawn directly onto the mummy bandages would suffice to invoke the power.

 

 

 
 
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