383 
God IAQ* Sometimes miniature copies of these cippi were 
manufactured in blue porcelain, and were hung as amulets 
around the necks of children, as was also a less common figure 
Fig. 110. Porcelain amulet (exact size). Horus the snake-headed. (Hay collection.) 
of the god Horus (fig. 109) wearing a serpent's head (fig. 110),f 
and the talismanic figures of the serpent of Eanno (fig. 111). 
Fig. 111. Amulet (exact size). Horus, as a hawk-headed urseus, wearing the solar 
, disk. 
In fact there was, the papyrus only excepted, scarcely any 
object so frequently used, or represented, either as an emblem 
of good or evil, as the snake, in its three great varieties. 
* Montfaucon, tom. ii. planche 370. 
f Homs being also mystically identified with the Good Serpent 
Agathademon. — Wilkinson, v. 398. 
VOL. VI. 2 I 
