Skip to main content
Datec. 1550-30 BCE
MediumFaience
DimensionsOverall: 1 7/16 × 3/4 × 1/4 in. (3.6 × 1.9 × 0.7 cm)
Credit LineGift of William C. Winslow, Class of 1862
Object number1943.168
Not on view
DescriptionAmulets portraying deities, animals, objects, and symbols served protective purposes for both the living and the dead. Many were worn on necklaces and rings to transfer positive properties directly to their wearers. Amulets of the protective deity Bes were frequently worn by women for protection during pregnancy and childbirth. Bes, the protector of women and children, is represented in art and amulets as a dwarf with a lion’s mane, ears, and tail, and wearing a feathered headdress. Bes amulets were most common during the Late and Ptolemaic Periods (ca. 664 – 30 BCE). (Written by Kayley Boddy '22)
Bes Amulet, faience, light-blue glaze. Originally had loop at top. Both faces frontal, representing Bes.
Collections