Almost twenty years ago Cassirer published a scarab in his collection, of unknown provenance, whose underside pictured a winged Asiatic god whom he saw as Canaanite deity Reshep,1 giving for it two virtually identical iconographic parallels, a scarab from Beth Pelet in northern Negev2 and a small plaque, purchased at Zagazig in Delta and formerly in MacGregor collection.3 While deity was not explicitly named in any of three representations, earlier scholarship did not hesitate in identifying him as Set, but Cassirer's image of a winged Reshep still crops up.4 Consequently, it may be useful to examine god of Cassirer scarab and its parallels a little more closely. The most detailed representation of this alate god is that of MacGregor plaque: god wears a tall, conical crown with a long, tasseled streamer dangling down from its apex, and with gazelle's head adorning its brow. He wears a broad collar around his neck; two bands cross his chest,5 and his short pleated, wrap-around kilt has a tiny flap hanging down in front. On Cassirer scarab, god is nude except for conical crown, with pendant streamer in back and gazelle's head in front. On Beth Pelet scarab, however, gazelle's head is replaced by a pair of horns and, though its details are not given, it is clear that deity wears a kilt with a fringed hem. In all three representations, god has a short, curved, and quite un-Egyptian beard, and has wings attached to his outstretched arms. His two feet pin down a huge serpent whose head he holds up with his left hand while, with his right hand, he grasps a spear just below its butt and stabs reptile in its middle. Reshep, of course, was not only Asiatic god to appear in Egyptian art from New Kingdom on. A small stela, of unknown provenance, now in Cairo Museum, pictures the engraver, Wose-seti worshipping a god named Keserty.6 Keserty sits on a high-backed throne and wears same tall, conical crown as winged god, with a strip of cloth wrapped around its middle and knotted at back, two ends hanging down as streamers. The gazelle's head adorns brow of crown. The god has a curved, pointed beard and wears an ankle-length kilt with a lion's tail affixed to his belt. In his left