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7. The crook in the right hand of the Crook shepherd presumably represents the crook shepherds normally once possessed - an instrument useful for catching an animal by the throat.

A stylized crook becomes a crosier (instrument for bishops and similar):

This example shows the top end of such a staff (which once belonged to Archbishop Heinrich of Finstingen, 1260-1286, according to Wikipedia).

Counting from right and upwards there are 11 'pegs' to reach the top. Then follow another 14 (sum 25) to reach the bottom. Finally there are 4 additional ones before a kind of limb connects to the interior of the crosier. 11 + 14 + 4 = 29 (probably symbolizing the last dark night of Moon). Both 11 and 25 are Saturn numbers, and 29 is subdivided by 4 such, with number 18 at the throat of the central lion. 11 + 7 + 7 + 4 = 29.

The externally located 'pegs' correspond, I think, to the 'feathers' around haś glyphs:

haś

Summary page for haś in my outline glyph type dictionary:

The haś glyphs are characterized by a bent 'branch', marked with 'feathers' on the outside:

The bent 'branch' represents the path of a luminary, beginning at bottom and moving up and clockwise, ending at the tip.

The 'feathers' are used to indicate calendrical periods. In the example above (Ab4-53) the 10 'feathers' possibly indicate how the 'summer year' is divided into 10 periods (with 18 days in each period).

In another example, below, from the Mamari moon calendar, the path of waxing moon presumably is divided into 15 periods: