Faience wedjat eye amulet
Third intermediate period
The 'sound' eye that restores life
The wedjat eye is perhaps the best known of all Egyptian protective
amulets. The drop and spiral below the eye imitate
the markings on a lanner falcon, the bird associated with the god
Horus. The name wedjat means 'the sound
one', referring to the lunar left eye of Horus that was plucked out by his rival
Seth during their conflict over the throne. The restoration of the eye is
variously attributed to Thoth,
Hathor or Isis. The injury
to the eye and its subsequent healing were believed to be reflected in the
waxing and waning of the moon.The first use of the wedjat eye as an amulet was when Horus offered it to Osiris. It was so powerful that it restored him to life. The regenerative and protective powers of the amulet meant that it was placed among the wrappings of mummies in great numbers. It could even replace food offerings in rituals. It first appeared in the late Old Kingdom and was used until mummification was no longer practised, in the Roman Period (30 BC - AD 395)
Amulets were made from many different materials, but blue or green faience was the most common, as these colours symbolized regeneration to the ancient Egyptian. The wedjat eye was also worn by the living. Faience factories have been found at Tell el-Amarna, where rings with wedjat eye bezels were very popular among the inhabitants.
C.A.R. Andrews, Amulets of Ancient Egypt (London, The British Museum Press, 1994)
British museum
museum website
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