Browse Items (14 total)

A fake scarab with cartouche on the base acquired by GH Bourne in 1915 as an imitation item to send home to Australia. The current whereabouts of the artefact is unknown. Bourne acquired a series of genuine and imitation artefacts in Egypt which are…

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A large grey terracotta scarab with the cartouche of Ramses II on the underside. The left cartouche is damaged by scratches, while the right cartouche is worn, but easily identified. Three large chips are missing from the edge of the scarab above the…

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A fake scarab decorated with four cobras in a brown stone. The clypeus is triangular and rather worn, and the head is very small, almost non existant. The thorax is shaped like an elongated pentagon and the elytra is divided in two, with notches on…

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A fake scarab with the name of Thutmose III in a buff-orange stone covered in a green glaze. The clypeus is diamond shaped and incised with five vertical lines. It sits below a very small triangular head and a large thorax. The elytra is divided…

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Scarab, terracotta/faience, modern. Large, green grey surface over a pale buff core, visible on reverse. Surface somewhat mottled. Not pierced. Reverse has 4x cartouches forming two royal names: Thutmose III and Ramses II. Famous pharoahs are…

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Scarab, faience, Egyptian possibly first intermediate period, green blue very light very worn, geometric pattern on reverse, damage to centre of obverse L.16.020-024 wrapped together.

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Scarab, faience/stone?, blue green, very worn, roughly finished obverse with strange layout of glyph on reverse  perhaps a deity  gardiner C series. L.16.020-024 wrapped together. probably modern

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Scarab, faience, Egyptian middle kingdom? possibly modern, pale buff colour, two rough glyphs (one compound?) on reverse  i-(nfr-xpr-?) L.16.020-024 wrapped together.

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Scarab, stone, Egyptian, perhaps late middle kingdom to second intermediate period? Pale buff, larger than #9 reverse is purely decorative, damage to one corner. L.16.020-024 wrapped together.

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Scarab, faience?, Egyptian late period? possibly modern. Pale buff colour with scarab glyph (L1  xpr) between two filling ornaments. L.16.020-024 wrapped together.
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