A faience Cippus figurine, now blue and red, of Horus the Child. The head has moulded features, and there is a scarab on the top of the head. Hawks flank his head, standing on plaques on his shoulders, and two protective deities, Isis and Nephthys, are visible down his sides. His arms are bent across his chest, and appear to hold two snakes. On the back of the piece is incised the figure of a winged female protective deity, with a sun’s disc and horns on her head. She stands on what may be crocodiles, which are wrapped around the figure to appear at the front under the feet of the male figure. There is a hole for suspension running through the back of the figure’s head.