C. Bonner, Amulets Chiefly in the British Museum, Hesperia 20 (1951), 301-345, no. 4.
Obv. At center, Hathor Aphrodite standing to front, head to r., clothed in short sleeved tunic and mantle draped round body from hips to ankles. A four pointed ornament on head may be meant for the crown of two feathers between horns. Her r. hand holds tall scepter with figure of a cow on the top, with l. hand she touches the shoulder of Osiris, who stands at r. facing her. The upper part of his body is covered with a network of cords or bandages (a survival of the representation of the god as a mummy); an upper garment hangs over his l. arm and is wound round his waist and thighs. Disk between horns on head. L. hand holds a tall scepter, the top of which has been chipped off, r. touches the mantle of Hathor below the waist. At l., behind the goddess, Harpocrates stands to l. on a small pedestal or altar. He is nude except for a kilt, and has on his head an indistinct ornament perhaps meant to suggest the hemhem crown (three papyrus bundles resting on a pair of horns). Star over his head, one over the heads of Hathor and Osiris, and eighteen others in vertical columns between the figures and between the group and the margins.
Rev. plain.
Limonite. Broad upright oval, 48 x 37, pierced for suspension. Chipped at upper r., lower l., and bottom. The irregular broken line which encloses the group seems to have been scratched later, and forms no part of the design.