Romano-Egyptian Terracotta Head of Harpocrates

£ 225.00

A Romano-Egyptian votive terracotta head of Harpocrates, the God of Secrets. Once belonging to a larger statuette, this remaining head piece displays delicately crafted features that emphasise the youth of the deity, such as his rounded cherubic cheeks and doll-like eyes. Atop his head, the tall double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt sits entirely intact. The reverse is unadorned. The fragment is accompanied with a custom-made stand.

Dimensions of head without stand: H. 6.2cm x W. 3cm.

Date: 1st Century BC - 2nd Century AD
Provenance: Ex Dr Magdy Collection, UK. Acquired in 1970s.
Condition: Very fine condition with detailed facial features remarkably intact. Minor scratches and marks to the surface consistent with age. The uneven base to this head is due to it once being part of a larger statuette.

In stock

SKU: SSK-10 Category: Tag:

In Ancient Egyptian culture and mythology Harpocrates, Harpa-Khruti (Horus the Child), was the son of the goddess Isis and her husband Osiris. The deity was often depicted as a small boy, with a sidelock of youth and the index finger held to the lips or the chin, a typical Egyptian gesture symbolising childhood and also the Ancient Egyptian hieroglyph for “child”. The deity was later adopted by the Greeks and the misinterpretation of the gesture of the finger to the lips led to the association of Harpocrates with silence, hence making him the god of silence, secrets and confidentiality in Ancient Greek and Roman mythology. These statuettes are a beautiful example of the cultural and aesthetic syncretism which was common in antiquity across the Mediterranean regions. It was perfectly accepted in the Ancient World that other deities could exist and that they had no less legitimacy than those in one’s territory. Harpocrates is an example of a god adopted and adapted by the Greeks, the Romans and the Egyptians.

Weight 34.6 g
Dimensions L 8.5 x W 3 cm
Culture

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Roman Mythology

Region

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Pottery and Porcelain

Reference: For a similar item, National Museums Liverpool, item M11669

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