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Egypt Feature Story
The Was-Scepter (or Staff)
by Jimmy Dunn

Physically,
a was-scepter consists of a staff with, what many scholars believe to be, the
head of a seth or a desert animal at the head, and an open fork at the base.
Some have speculated that the head could, at least at times, be in the form of a
gazelle, a bird, a snake or some sort of
fantastic animal.
Others have argued that the fork at the base could actually symbolize legs. Used
to support that argument is the fact that was-scepters are sometimes depicted in
a personification, having arms added to the staff, but there are other such
personifications of objects that would tend to dispute this theory.
We believe that the was-scepter may have been derived from walking sticks,
fighting canes or perhaps even tent poles. Its forked base may have originally,
and later even symbolically, been intended for controlling serpents, but this is
by no means clear, and there are many arguments and theories about the origins
of this ancient device. The was-scepter was a visual representation of the
concept of "power" or "dominion". Hence, it could symbolize power and authority.
It is also associated with wealth and happiness. In later Egyptian reliefs, the
was-scepter sometimes served as a vertical border on scenes, supporting
elongated "sky" hieroglyphs and standing on elongated "earth" hieroglyphs, which
served as the horizontal parts of the frame. They seem, therefore, to represent
the pillars of
the
sky, and hence dominion over the entire universe. However, the was-scepter was
also the hieroglyph for "Thebes".
Naturally, its earliest depictions in Egyptian art found it in the hands of the gods and goddesses, and a number of different gods through the pharaonic period are depicted with was-scepters. Later, it was co-opted for representations of kings, and still later, could even be depicted in the mortuary representations of private persons.
Was-staff could be represented both two dimensionally and in the round in a
variety of ways. As mentioned, they could be depicted as a sort of border,
but more typically they were either shown in the hands of a god or king, or as a
staff. Variations on the was-scepter were found in the hands of
Osiris and
Ptah.
In
their hands, it was combined with the
ankh and
djed pillar,
but there are also objects in the round also made in this manner. It could also
sometimes be depicted as a hieroglyph, together with the ankh, being poured over
the head of a ruler, therefore giving him both life and dominion.
It should probably be distinguished from a d'm-staff (or djam-staff), which is identical to the was-staff with the exception of an undulated shaft. Some sources have referred to these two different objects as being identical, but in fact the djam staff's hieroglyphic meaning is "electrum", a precious natural alloy of gold and silver, and it is more closely associated with Geb, god of the earth.
Though seen throughout ancient Egyptian art, unfortunately, while the overall meaning of the was-scepter seems fairly clear, textual information and other evidence about its origins, and probably there are nuances related to its various forms that we know practically nothing about.
Resources:
| Title | Author | Date | Publisher | Reference Number |
| Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt, The | Wilkinson, Richard H. | 2003 | Thames & Hudson, LTD | ISBN 0-500-05120-8 |
| Dictionary of Ancient Egypt, The | Shaw, Ian; Nicholson, Paul | 1995 | Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers | ISBN 0-8109-3225-3 |
| Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses, A | Hart, George | 1986 | Routledge | ISBN 0-415-05909-7 |
| Egyptian Treasures from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo | Tiradritti, Francesco, Editor | 1999 | Harry N. Abrams, Inc. | ISBN 0-8109-3276-8 |
| Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, The | Redford, Donald B. (Editor) | 2001 | American University in Cairo Press, The | ISBN 977 424 581 4 |
| Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture | Wilkinson, Richard H. | 1992 | Thames & Hudson LTD | ISBN 0-300-27751-6 |
| Treasures of Tutankhamun | British Museum | 1972 | Thames & Hudson Ltd | ISBN 0 7230 0070 0 |
Last Updated: 09/23/2005