A RARE BRONZE AND INLAID GOLD DJED-COLUMN OF PSAMMETICHUS I, the details on the upper part of the column inlaid with electrum, the base of the column chased with hieroglyphs for the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Wah-ib-re (Psamtek I), given life for ever, Dynasty XXVI, reign of Psammetichus I, 664-610 B.C.

Details
A RARE BRONZE AND INLAID GOLD DJED-COLUMN OF PSAMMETICHUS I, the details on the upper part of the column inlaid with electrum, the base of the column chased with hieroglyphs for the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Wah-ib-re (Psamtek I), given life for ever, Dynasty XXVI, reign of Psammetichus I, 664-610 B.C.
3½in. (9cm.) high

Lot Essay

The djed-column was a prehistoric fetish, possibly representing the backbone of Osiris, and is the Egyptian word for stability. In the famous scene at Abydos, Seti I raises the defunct pillar so that it stands on its own axis, a sign of restored divine order, and therefore stability and peace throughout the land

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