Horus was represented as a
falcon, such as a
lanner or
peregrine falcon, or as a human with a falcon head. The Eye of Horus is a stylized human or falcon eye. The symbol often includes an eyebrow, a dark line extending behind the rear corner of the eye, a cheek marking below the center or forward corner of the eye, and a line extending below and toward the rear of the eye that ends in a curl or spiral. The cheek marking resembles that found on many falcons. The Egyptologist
Richard H. Wilkinson suggests that the curling line is derived from the facial markings of the
cheetah, which the Egyptians associated with the sky because the spots in its coat were likened to stars. The stylized eye symbol was used interchangeably to represent the Eye of Ra. Egyptologists often simply refer to this symbol as the
wedjat eye.
Amulets Amulets in the shape of the
wedjat eye first appeared in the late Old Kingdom and continued to be produced up to Roman times. Ancient Egyptians were usually buried with amulets, and the Eye of Horus was one of the most consistently popular forms of amulet. It is one of the few types commonly found on Old Kingdom
mummies, and it remained in widespread use over the next two thousand years, even as the number and variety of funerary amulets greatly increased. Up until the New Kingdom, funerary
wedjat amulets tended to be placed on the chest, whereas during and after the New Kingdom they were commonly placed over the incision through which the body's internal organs had been removed during the mummification process.
Wedjat amulets were made from a wide variety of materials, including
Egyptian faience, glass, gold, and semiprecious stones such as
lapis lazuli. Their form also varied greatly. These amulets could represent right or left eyes, and the eye could be formed of openwork, incorporated into a plaque, or reduced to little more than an outline of the eye shape, with minimal decoration to indicate the position of the pupil and brow. In the New Kingdom, elaborate forms appeared: a
uraeus, or rearing cobra, could appear at the front of the eye; the rear spiral could become a bird's tail feathers; and the cheek mark could be a bird's leg or a human arm. Cobras and felines often represented the Eye of Ra, so Eye of Horus amulets that incorporate uraei or feline body parts may represent the relationship between the two eyes, as may amulets that bear the
wedjat eye on one side and the figure of a goddess on the other. The
Third Intermediate Period (–664 BC) saw still more complex designs, in which multiple small figures of animals or deities were inserted in the gaps between the parts of the eye, or in which the eyes were grouped into sets of four. The eye symbol could also be incorporated into larger pieces of jewelry alongside other protective symbols, such as the
ankh and
djed signs and various emblems of deities. Beginning in the thirteenth century BC, glass beads bearing eye-like spots were strung on necklaces together with
wedjat amulets, which may be the origin of the modern
nazar, a type of bead meant to ward off the
evil eye. Sometimes temporary amulets were created for protective purposes in especially dangerous situations, such as illness or childbirth. Rubrics for ritual spells often instruct the practitioner to draw the
wedjat eye on linen or papyrus to serve as a temporary amulet. File:Wedjat Eye Amulet MET 11.215.128.jpg|
Wedjat amulet, ,
Metropolitan Museum of Art File:Wedjat-eye amulet MET 26.7.1080 front.nk.jpg|
Wedjat amulet, , Metropolitan Museum of Art File:Faience Wedjat-eye amulet MET DP121842.jpg|Egyptian faience
wedjat amulet, , Metropolitan Museum of Art File:Wedjat Incision Plaque MET 62416.jpg|
Wedjat plaque, , Metropolitan Museum of Art
Other uses Wedjat eyes appeared in a wide variety of contexts in Egyptian art. Coffins of the
First Intermediate Period () and Middle Kingdom often included a pair of
wedjat eyes painted on the left side. Mummies at this time were often turned to face left, suggesting that the eyes were meant to allow the deceased to see outside the coffin, but the eyes were probably also meant to ward off danger. Similarly, eyes of Horus were often painted on the bows of boats, which may have been meant to both protect the vessel and allow it to see the way ahead.
Wedjat eyes were sometimes portrayed with wings, hovering protectively over kings or deities.
Stelae, or carved stone slabs, were often inscribed with
wedjat eyes. In some periods of Egyptian history, only deities or kings could be portrayed directly beneath the
winged sun symbol that often appeared in the lunettes of stelae, and Eyes of Horus were placed above figures of common people. The symbol could also be incorporated into tattoos, as demonstrated by the mummy of a woman from the late New Kingdom that was decorated with elaborate tattoos, including several
wedjat eyes. Some cultures neighboring Egypt adopted the
wedjat symbol for use in their own art. Some Egyptian artistic motifs became widespread in art from
Canaan and
Syria during the
Middle Bronze Age. Art of this era sometimes incorporated the
wedjat, though it was much more rare than other Egyptian symbols such as the
ankh. In contrast, the
wedjat appeared frequently in art of the
Kingdom of Kush in
Nubia, in the first millennium BC and early first millennium AD, demonstrating Egypt's heavy influence upon Kush. Down to the present day, eyes are painted on the bows of ships in many Mediterranean countries, a custom that may descend from the use of the
wedjat eye on boats. File:Ignota prov., sarcofago di Irinimenpu, XII-XIII dinastia, 1938-1640 ac. 04.JPG|
Wedjat eyes on the coffin of Irinimenpu, twentieth to seventeenth century BC File:Inner Coffin of Henettawy (F) MET 25.3.183a b EGDP022934.jpg|Winged
wedjat eyes on the coffin of Henettawy, tenth century BC File:Uhemmenu pouring dring for Iat-C 90-IMG 0080-gradient.jpg|
Wedjat eyes atop the stela of Uhemmenu, sixteenth century BC File:A post-Meroitic era Nubian royal crown from Ballana Tomb 118 by John Campana.jpg|Crown from the post-Meroitic period in Nubia, , incorporating multiple
wedjat eyes
Hieroglyphic form A
hieroglyphic version of the
wedjat symbol, labeled D10 in the
list of hieroglyphic signs drawn up by the Egyptologist
Alan Gardiner, was used in writing as a
determinative or
ideogram for the Eye of Horus. The Egyptians sometimes used signs that represented pieces of the
wedjat eye hieroglyph. In 1911, the Egyptologist
Georg Möller noted that on New Kingdom "votive cubits", inscribed stone objects with a length of one
cubit, these hieroglyphs were inscribed together with similarly shaped symbols in the
hieratic writing system, a cursive writing system whose signs derived from hieroglyphs. The hieratic signs stood for fractions of a
hekat, the basic Egyptian measure of volume. Möller hypothesized that the Horus-eye hieroglyphs were the original hieroglyphic forms of the hieratic fraction signs, and that the inner corner of the eye stood for 1/2, the pupil for 1/4, the eyebrow for 1/8, the outer corner for 1/16, the curling line for 1/32, and the cheek mark for 1/64. In 1923,
T. Eric Peet pointed out that the hieroglyphs representing pieces of the eye are not found before the New Kingdom, and he suggested that the hieratic fraction signs had a separate origin but were reinterpreted during the New Kingdom to have a connection with the Eye of Horus. In the same decade, Möller's hypothesis was included in standard reference works on the Egyptian language, such as
Ägyptische Grammatik by
Adolf Erman and
Egyptian Grammar by Alan Gardiner. Gardiner's treatment of the subject suggested that the parts of the eye were used to represent fractions because in myth the eye was torn apart by Set and later made whole. Egyptologists accepted Gardiner's interpretation for decades afterward. Jim Ritter, a historian of science and mathematics, analyzed the shape of the hieratic signs through Egyptian history in 2002. He concluded that "the further back we go the further the hieratic signs diverge from their supposed Horus-eye counterparts", thus undermining Möller's hypothesis. He also reexamined the votive cubits and argued that they do not clearly equate the Eye of Horus signs with the hieratic fractions, so even Peet's weaker form of the hypothesis was unlikely to be correct. Nevertheless, the 2014 edition of
James P. Allen's
Middle Egyptian, an introductory book on the Egyptian language, still lists the pieces of the
wedjat eye as representing fractions of a
hekat. The hieroglyph for the Eye of Horus is listed in the
Egyptian Hieroglyphs block of the
Unicode standard for encoding symbols in computing, as U+13080 (). The hieroglyphs for parts of the eye (, , , , , , ) are listed as U+13081 through U+13087. == Notes ==