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  2. Birth tusk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth_tusk

    Birth tusks (also called magical wands or apotropaic wands [1]) are wands for apotropaic magic (to ward off evil), mainly from the Middle Kingdom of Egypt. They are most often made of hippopotamus ivory ( Taweret , represented as a bipedal hippopotamus is the goddess of childbirth and fertility), are inscribed and decorated with a series of ...

  3. Apotropaic magic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apotropaic_magic

    An ancient Egyptian apotropaic wand shows a procession of protective deities. It was used in birth rituals, perhaps to draw a magic circle around the mother and child. Items and symbols such as crosses, crucifixes, silver bullets, wild roses and garlic were believed to ward off or destroy vampires.

  4. Wand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wand

    The latest apotropaic wand found belongs to the Second Intermediate Period king Senebkay. [5] It seems that the use of these objects in Egypt declines after this point. The Barsom used by Zoroastrian Magi is a bundle of twigs that was used during religious ceremonies. While the Barsom is not a wand itself, it was also used for divination ...

  5. Apep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apep

    In an annual rite called the Ritual of Overthrowing Apophis, priests would build an effigy of Apep that was thought to contain all of the evil and darkness in Egypt, and burn it to protect everyone from Apep's evil for another year.

  6. Taweret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taweret

    Such a wand would have been used in rituals associated with birth and were perhaps used to draw a magical circle around the mother and child. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. Faience Amulet of Taweret from the late period of Ancient Egypt. Egyptian Museum (Turin, Italy) Taweret's image served a functional purpose on a variety of objects.

  7. A monster diamond, ancient lipstick and erotic Roman ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/monster-diamond-ancient...

    These apotropaic marks were discovered at a Tudor property, once visited by Henry VIII and his then Queen, Catherine Howard, and were meant to provide ritual protection. - English Heritage

  8. Ceremonial magic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceremonial_magic

    The Crystal Ball, by John William Waterhouse (1902), depicts a crystal ball, a skull, a wand, and a book of ceremonial magic. The art of divination is generally employed for the purpose of obtaining information that can guide the adept in his Great Work. The underlying theory states that there exists intelligences (either outside of or inside ...

  9. Namburbi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namburbi

    The greatest numbers of apotropaic ritual were to counteract terrestrial signs observed in nature, in the immediate vicinity and workspace of the subject, in and near the house of a man, and in the field of agriculture and animal husbandry. This has led to the supposition that their origin may have been in rites of the rural population.