Ring with Wedjat Eye ("Eye of Horus")
Ring with Wedjat Eye ("Eye of Horus")
Place of OriginEgypt, reportedly from near Giza
Date18th Dynasty (1550-1292 BCE)
Dimensions13/16 in. (2.1 cm)
MediumFaience
ClassificationJewelry
Object number
1926.94
Not on View
DescriptionA finger ring made of molded faience (glazed composition). The bezel is formed in the shape of a Wedjat eye (Eye of Horus), featuring the characteristic human eye with falcon markings (the "teardrop" and spiral markings). The glaze is turquoise-blue.
Label TextThis bright blue ring features the Wedjat eye, or Eye of Horus—one of ancient Egypt’s most powerful symbols. Representing the healed eye of the falcon god Horus, it was believed to offer magical protection, health, and wholeness to its wearer. In the 18th Dynasty, colorful faience rings like this were mass-produced, allowing people outside the royal court to wear jewelry that mimicked precious stones like turquoise and lapis lazuli. This ring was acquired in 1926 from the collection of Azeez Khayat, a prominent early 20th-century antiquities dealer.Published ReferencesAnderson Galleries, Auction 2050, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Phoenician, Saracenic & Persian Antiques... Collected by Azeez Khayat, New York, 1926, p. 14, lot 96.
18th Dynasty (1550-1292 BCE)
26th Dynasty (664–525 BCE)
Predynastic Period, Naqada II, about 3600-3200 BCE
18th-20th Dynasties, possibly later (1558-1085 BCE)
18th Dynasty (1550-1292 BCE), about 1500 BCE
25th–31st Dynasties (747–332 BCE)
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