Fragment of ancient Egyptian goddess found at an Iron Age settlement in Spain

Archaeologists excavating a 2,700-year-old settlement in Salamanca, Spain, have discovered an artifact believed to be used for a depiction of an ancient Egyptian goddess.

Fragment of ancient Egyptian goddess found at an Iron Age settlement in SpainArcheologists excavating the site at the Cerro de San Vicente. Credit: University of Salamanca

The team was excavating on the Cerro de San Vicente, one of Salamanca’s three hills where the walled Iron Age settlement was discovered in 1990.

The latest excavation, led by Antonio Blanco and Juan Jes Padilla of the University of Salamanca, unearthed amulets and painted ceramics with Egyptian or other eastern Mediterranean motifs.

The ceramics are part of a glazed ceramic inlay with gold leaf. This type of fragment was commonly laid on flat surfaces in ancient Egypt to construct images of deities.

The inlay fragment, according to researchers, is part of a larger image of the goddess Hathor. The fragment is about five centimetres long and depicts the bottom section of the goddess’s hair with her curls clearly visible.

The goddess Hathor was worshiped as the Egyptian sun god Ra’s daughter and the consort or mother of Horus, a falcon-headed deity, both of whom were ᴀssociated with kingship, and thus she was the symbolic mother of their earthly representatives, the pharaohs.

Archaeologists discovered ceramics that had been deliberately placed within the walls of a rectangular hall. They were placed among the adobe blocks and mud grout, along with a shark’s tooth, necklace beads, and a fragment of an amphora with Egyptian blue floral designs.

“Each piece was shaped to fit perfectly into its support base. Then, with a kind of resin or adhesive, they were glued into place. We are currently analyzing the piece in our laboratory to see if there are any traces of this glue still on the inner surface, to determine what kind of resin was used.” padilla told El Pais.

It’s unclear how an image of Hathor was found at an Iron Age site in Spain. The team believes that the artifact was sent by a Phoenician delegation as a gift or to trade. but it is also possible that the people of the settlements adopted the rites and iconography of far-reaching eastern Mediterranean cultures.

 

Tags: Ancient EgyptIron AgePhoenicia

Related Posts

Ancient finger grooves in glittering Australian cave reveal sacred rituals of First Nations ancestors

Ancient finger grooves in glittering Australian cave reveal sacred rituals of First Nations ancestors

Researchers have just uncovered ancient finger marks—traces of sacred gestures from millennia past—deep within a limestone cave called New Guinea II, in GunaiKurnai Country in southeastern Australia….

900-year-old Viking-era carved head unearthed in Orkney

900-year-old Viking-era carved head unearthed in Orkney

An unexpected discovery during a summer excavation on the Orkney island of Rousay has fascinated archaeologists—a carved sandstone head, possibly more than 900 years old, was unearthed…

Archaeologists uncover 14th-century Genoese and Ottoman fortresses beneath Odesa’s Duke monument in Ukraine

Archaeologists uncover 14th-century Genoese and Ottoman fortresses beneath Odesa’s Duke monument in Ukraine

Archaeologists have now, at long last, confirmed the location of the long-lost Ottoman fortress of Hajibey and the earlier Genoese stronghold of Ginestra, located under Odesa’s Primorsky…

Neanderthals ate maggots and fermented meat, not just fresh meat, challenging hypercarnivore theory

Neanderthals ate maggots and fermented meat, not just fresh meat, challenging hypercarnivore theory

For generations, scientists believed Neanderthals were high-order carnivores, subsisting on large game. Their fossilized bones indicated they had high levels of nitrogen-15, a chemical marker of diets…

250-year-old shipwreck in Orkney identified as Earl of Chatham, a former Royal Navy and whaling vessel

250-year-old shipwreck in Orkney identified as Earl of Chatham, a former Royal Navy and whaling vessel

A collaborative work carried out by archaeologists and the community of Sanday, Orkney, has finally identified a strange wreck uncovered in February 2024 as the Earl of…

5,500-year-old flint workshop uncovered near Kiryat Gat

5,500-year-old flint workshop uncovered near Kiryat Gat

Archaeologists in Israel have discovered a 5,500-year-old flint-making workshop near Kiryat Gat in a salvage excavation in Naḥal Qomem, also known as Gat-Govrin or Zeita. The excavation…