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Ancienne Égypte

Mythology Necklace <br />(Steel)

Mythology Necklace <br />(Steel)

Regular price $128.000,00
Regular price Sale price $128.000,00
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Eye color

An Egyptian necklace "seal of Nephthys" which refers to the wife of the god of chaos Set: the goddess Nephthys.

  • Stainless steel necklace: quality 316L steel, nobly patinates over time, water resistant
  • Resistant necklace: meshed, reinforced and elegant structure
  • Neat and precise details
  • Chain length: 27.5" (70 cm) | Pendant size: 33x46 mm | Weight: ~40.6 gr
  • FREE STANDARD SHIPPING

📏Refer to our MEASUREMENT GUIDE to see how the necklace will look according to its length.📏

If you are looking for a pendant, memory of the land of Horus, Osiris and Isis, this eye of Horus necklace "hearth ankh" (steel) might be a smart choice! You can as well visit our complete collection of eye of Horus necklaces to discover all our models which carry the famous "Udjat symbol".

If you would prefer a scarab necklace or an ankh necklace, you can also have a look at all our Egyptian necklaces. If you want to find the perfect piece, you can finally discover the rings, bracelets and necklaces which constitute our Egyptian jewelry collection.

Wepwawet Anubis pharaoh Narmer Anput (Middle and New kingdom)

 

An Egyptian ankh necklace

Horus was worshipped in the temple of Kom Ombo, a temple that the hawk god shared with the crocodile god Sobek and where his birth and his battles with the god of chaos Set were celebrated at certain times of the year.
 
The version of Horus worshipped in this temple is not however the form that we know the most nowadays. Indeed, the Horus worshipped in Kom Ombo is "Horus-Haroëris" or "Horus the Elder": a Horus who was not the son of the gods Osiris and Isis, but a god directly created by the Sun god Ra and who got for mission to protect Egypt against the chaos serpent Apep and against the chaos god Set.
 

A pendant from ancient Egypt

The version of Horus "Horus-Behedet" (the Horus son of Osiris and Isis) is worshipped in his temple at Edfu. This temple is quite well-known for its pylons of 80-meter high which were perfectly conserved through millennia because all the temple has been covered by the sand of desert few centuries after its construction.
 
The construction of the temple of Edfu began in 237 BC by Ptolemy III and was completed in 57 BC by Ptolemy XII (the father of the queen Cleopatra). According to its legend, the second largest temple of Egypt (after the Karnak temple of the god Amun) would have been built on the site of the first battle between Horus and Set.
 
Due to the values that embodied Horus and due to its elegant head of falcon, Horus has worshipped outside of Egypt (notably in Nubia) and even became popular in the Greco-Roman world before the rise of Christianity.
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