This small bone carving (Figure 1) shows Isis nursing her son, Horus. It was probably made in Alexandria about the beginning of the 2nd century CE.
For over 3,000 years, Isis was a nurturing spirit for the Egyptians, being the goddess of motherhood, wifehood and the constant renewal of life on the land, when the Nile renewed its fertility each year. Egyptian Isis (Figure 2) was usually depicted in a stark rigid pose, wearing a short tunic, with Horus, her son, sitting upright on her right knee. On her head she wore her symbols – two cow corns with a sun disc in the centre. Often she also had a small snake, called uruaeus, on her brow, a symbol of kingship. These symbols were her brand: they made her instantly recognisable.