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Bracelets of Nimlot

-940/-940

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The archaeologist Pierre Montet (1885-1966) found some remarkable jewellery in the burials of the Egyptian kings of the Twenty-first to Twenty-third Dynasties, in the royal cemetery at Tanis. Most of this material is now in the Cairo Museum, but The British Museum possesses this pair of bracelets, that almost certainly came from a mummy.

The bracelets were made in the Third Intermediate Period. Each bracelet is made of two segments of sheet gold, hinged together and fastened with a retractable pin. The principal decoration is a figure of the god Horus the child, usually known by his Greek name, Harpokrates. He is depicted as a royal child, squatting on a lotus flower and holding a sceptre. On his head is a moon disc, either side of which is a large gold serpent with a sun disc on its head (uraeus). The rest of the bracelet was probably inlaid with red or blue glass.

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  • Title: Bracelets of Nimlot
  • Date Created: -940/-940
  • Physical Dimensions: Diameter: 6.30cm; Height: 4.00cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: inlaid
  • Subject: ancient egyptian deity
  • Registration number: 1850,0817.2
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Sa el-Hagar
  • Period/culture: 22nd Dynasty
  • Material: gold; lapis lazuli
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Authority: Ruler Sheshonq I
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Murray, Charles Augustus
British Museum

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