Talisman of Ancient Googly-Eyed God Discovered

By Owen Jarus | LiveScience.com

A newly identified googly-eyed artifact may have been used by the ancient Egyptians to magically protect children and pregnant mothers from evil forces.

Made of faience, a delicate material that contains silica, the pale-green talisman of sorts dates to sometime in the first millennium B.C. It shows the dwarf god Bes with his tongue sticking out, eyes googly, wearing a crown of feathers. A hole at the top of the face was likely used to suspend it like a bell, while a second hole, used to hold the bell clapper, was apparently drilled into it in antiquity.


Bes, a dwarf god and protector of young children and pregnant women, is depicted in this faience bell from the first millennium B.C.
CREDIT: Photo courtesy Egypt Centre/Swansea University


Carolyn Graves-Brown, a curator at the Egypt Centre, discovered the artifact in the collection of Woking College, the equivalent of a high school for juniors and seniors. The college has more than 50 little-studied Egyptian artifacts, which were recently lent to the Egypt Centre at Swansea University where they are being studied and documented.

Graves-Brown told LiveScience in an interview that at first she didnt know what the object was. It wasnt until she learned of a similar artifact in the British Museum that she was able to determine that it is a faience Bes bell, one of a very few known to exist.

“If you try to rattle it much it would (have) broken easily,” she said.

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Read the full article at: livescience.com

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