Ankh
The Ankh, also known as the Key of Life, The Key of the Nile or Crux Ansata (Latin for “cross with a handle”), was the ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic character that read “Life”. The Ankh represents the concept of eternal life, which is the meaning of the symbol. Egyptian gods are usually portrayed carrying the Ankh by its loop, or holding one in each hand.
Egyptian Cat Bastet
The first reference to the domestic cat appears in the eleventh dynasty. Because it was hostile to snakes, it became a sacred animal of the Sun God. In the New Kingdom, the male cat was regarded as an incarnation of the Sun God and the female cat was equated with the solar eye.
Headrest
This wooden object was used as a type of Egyptian pillow. It doesn't look very comfortable because the padding is missing from the part that touches your head. Some were plain and some were beautifully carved. Headrests were also used to support the heads of the dead to keep evil spirits from entering from the ground, into the body.
Eye of Horus
An amulet could also be called a lucky charm. They were often made to represent one of the many different gods that the Egyptians believed in. This amulet represents 'Horus' who was one of the most powerful gods. He had a man's body and a hawk's head. Alot of amulets have been found in Egyptian tombs as they were wrapped up with body in order to protect it from evil.
Shabti
Shabti figures were statuettes, usually in the form of a mummy. The Egyptians believed that these would magically carry out any work they had to do in the 'afterlife'. Often 365 Shabti figures were placed in a tomb that's one for each day of the year.
Flint Knife
The flint blade was produced in Egypt from prehistoric times. Flint was probably the first stone worked by human hands into tools. Even after metal knives became common in Egypt, the flint knife was still used in religious rituals, including during mummification.
Sphinx
The word "Sphinx" used by the Greeks derives perhaps from the Egyptian Shesepankh "Living Statue". It designates a type of statue joining a human head to the body of a lion and symbolizes sovereignty combining the strength of the lion with a human intelligence. The Egyptian Sphinx was, with only a few exceptions in representations of some Queens of the Middle Kingdom, shown as male. Also, the Egyptian Sphinx was viewed as benevolent, a guardian, whereas the Greek Sphinx was invariably malevolent towards people. The Sphinx was the embodiment of royal power often shown smiting the King's enemies, or the King himself being represented as a victorious Sphinx trampling on his foes.
Crook & Flail
The crook (heka) and the flail or flabellum (nekhakha), are two of the most prominent items in the royal regalia of ancient Egypt. Actual, very fine examples of both survive from ancient Egypt, as do statues and various wall reliefs, paintings and papyrus with representations of these objects.
Scarab
By far the most important amulet in ancient Egypt was the scarab, symbolically as sacred to the Egyptians as the cross is to Christians. In the First Intermediate Period the undersides of Scarabs were decorated. They were probably sacred to the Egyptians, because there was many found in jars. Scarabs are the most numerous amulets and were produced well beyond the dynastic periods.
Saqqara Bird
The Saqqara Bird is a bird-shaped artifact made of sycamore wood, discovered during the 1898 excavation of the Pa-di-Imen tomb in Saqqara, Egypt. It has been dated to approximately 200 BCE, and is now housed in the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities in Cairo. The Saqqara Bird has a wingspan of 180 mm (7.1 in) and weighs 39.12 g (1.380 oz). Its function is not understood because of a lack of period documentation.