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Important Egyptian Jewellery

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Egyptian, A necklace of Egyptian hands and feet amulets, Old Kingdom to New Kingdom, circa 2500 - 1000 BC
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Egyptian, A necklace of Egyptian hands and feet amulets, Old Kingdom to New Kingdom, circa 2500 - 1000 BC

Egyptian

A necklace of Egyptian hands and feet amulets, Old Kingdom to New Kingdom, circa 2500 - 1000 BC
Hardstone, glass, gold
Length: 7 cm
Maximum length of amulets: 2.4 cm
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Further images

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Restrung with carnelian, amethyst and glass amulets mainly of hands and feet; with added gold beads and wire, modern beads added.
Restrung with carnelian, amethyst and glass amulets mainly of hands and feet; with added gold beads and wire, modern beads added.

Provenance

With Merton Simpson, New York, before 1988
With Galerie Nefer, Zurich, 1988
Private Collection, Aarau, thence by descent
Private Collection, Switzerland

Exhibitions

On Loan: Antikenmuseum Basel & Sammlung Ludwig, 1998 – 2022

Literature

From the Old Kingdom through to the New Kingdom, small amulets of hands and feet were commonly included in bracelets and anklets to protect the limbs and extremities of their wearers. It is thought that they may also have been intended to bestow athletic and practical skills and abilities on the wearer. Often these amulets were made of carnelian and the colour, reminiscent of blood, was believed to bring power and energy to the amulet. See Brooklyn Museum, acc. no. 57.76.1 for a similar carnelian hand example dated to the New Kingdom; also the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, acc. no. 10.130.2358 for a hand; 10.130.2355 for a foot both from the Old Kingdom. See C. Andrews, Amulets of Ancient Egypt, p. 71, nos. 74e and 74g.
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