Apotropaic wand
From Thebes, Egypt
Late
Middle Kingdom, around 1750 BC
A magical 'knife' intended for
the protection of a mother and child
Childbirth and early infancy were felt to be
particularly threatening to both mother and baby. Magic played the
primary role in countering these threats; various evil spirits
needed to be warned off, and deities invoked to protect the
vulnerable. These magic knives, also known as apotropaic (that is,
acting to ward off evil) wands, were one of the devices used. They
are usually made of hippopotamus ivory, thus enlisting the support
of that fearsome beast against
evil.
The term
'knife' is inappropriate, and the shape may be
related more to the throwstick (similar to a modern boomerang).
Throwsticks were used to hunt birds, and flocks of birds were seen
as a symbol of chaos, hence the appropriateness of the
shape.
The depictions on
this knife encompass a range of protective images. They include a
grotesque dwarf, probably known as Aha at this date, but later the
more famous
Bes,
and
Taweret
(a pregnant hippopotamus carrying a knife), both of whom are
associated with childbirth. Lions, the scarab of rebirth, serpents,
and other fantastic protective demons also
feature.
Archaeologists
have found that many of these 'knives' seem to have
been deliberately broken before being placed in the tombs. One
explanation is that this was done to destroy some of the
object's powers, which would have been inappropriate in the
context of death and burial.
G. Pinch, Magic in Ancient Egypt (London, The British Museum Press, 1994)
S. Quirke, Ancient Egyptian religion (London, The British Museum Press, 1992)