Main Menu

Necklace with Squatting Bes Amulet and Floral Pendants

Skip to main content
Collections Menu

Necklace with Squatting Bes Amulet and Floral Pendants

Place of OriginEgypt
Date18th–19th Dynasties (1550–1189 BCE)
Dimensionsoverall: 29 in. (73.7 cm)
MediumCarnelian, garnet, and jasper
ClassificationJewelry
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Grant Williams
Object number
1943.44
Not on View
DescriptionA necklace composed of numerous spherical and disc-shaped stone beads. The strand is punctuated by twenty-two drop-shaped pendants resembling floral buds (poppy or cornflower). The necklace features a focal point at the bottom center: a figural amulet carved in the shape of the dwarf-god Bes, depicted in a squatting position with bowed legs. The beads are graduated and arranged symmetrically around this central amulet.
Label TextThis necklace was designed not just for adornment, but for spiritual defense. Strung with carnelian, garnet, and jasper, its red hues invoked the revitalizing power of the sun and blood. Interspersed among the beads are floral pendants symbolizing rebirth, but the primary protector hangs at the center: a small amulet of Bes. Depicted in his characteristic squatting posture, the dwarf-god Bes was a fierce guardian of the household who warded off evil spirits and protected women and children. This piece was a personal gift to the museum from Caroline Ransom Williams, the first American woman to earn a Ph.D. in Egyptology.Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, The Egypt Experience: Secrets of the Tomb, October 29, 2010-January 8, 2012.
Poppy-Bead Necklace
18th Dynasty (1550-1292 BCE), about 1350 BCE
Poppy-Bead Necklace
Dynasty 17
17th Dynasty (1580–1550 BCE)
Necklace Beads with Bes-Shaped Pendants
25th–31st Dynasties (747–332 BCE)
Miniature Vessel
3rd to early 4th century CE
Necklace of Rosettes and Spacer Beads
Probably Late Helladic III, about the 14th-12th century BCE
Source de la Fontaine, Melite
René Jules Lalique
model introduced, 1924

Membership

Become a TMA member today

Support TMA

Help support the TMA mission