Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Statuette of a hippo goddess, probably Taweret

View through The Met
Glassy faience, Ptolemaic Period
Rights: Public Domain
Egyptian Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY, Purchase Edward S. Harkness Gift 1926
image-zoom
Title: Statuette of a hippo goddess, probably Taweret
Description:
Glassy faience, Ptolemaic Period.

Related Results

Goddess of the Gate of the Sun. Iberian oppidum of Puente Tablas (Jaén, Spain)
Goddess of the Gate of the Sun. Iberian oppidum of Puente Tablas (Jaén, Spain)
The Iberian oppidum of Plaza de Armas in Puente Tablas is located 7 km outside of Jaén, next to the regional road J-V-312, Jaén-Torrequebradilla, in the eastern countryside and at ...
Terracotta Group of the Ephesian Artemis
Terracotta Group of the Ephesian Artemis
This terracotta statuette group is a representation of the Artemis of Ephesos. The goddess stands frontally, arms held out from her sides. She wears a high headdress (kalathos), an...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...
Inner coffin of an anonymous lady
Inner coffin of an anonymous lady
Inner chest of anonymous lady ; Painted on stucco (plaster) ; Third Intermediate Period, 21st dynasty (c. 1069-945 BCE) ; Second cachet of Deir el-Bahari (Bab el-Gasous); The inscr...
Taweret statuette
Taweret statuette
Faience paint, Middle Kingdom, Dynasty 12 early...
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that
Historians have always believed that commerce existed between the Roman Empire and India, now the first actual evidence of this has come to light. Proof is given by a small, ornate...

Back to Top