Inlay depicting squatting goddess, probably Hathor

Late Period–Ptolemaic Period

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 134

This inlay represents a small crouching female goddess. She wears the vulture headdress associated by this time with great mother goddesses, topped by a modius of uraei and a disk, all broken away. She originally held a scepter in the fist on her knee. The king Nectanebo II incorporated into his royal names epithets relating him to the goddess Hathor.

Inlay depicting squatting goddess, probably Hathor, Faience

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