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Religion in ancient Egypt was an important
part of everyday life. Priests attended daily to the needs of the gods, (who
were thought to be manifested in their cult images), made offerings to them, and
thus kept the forces of chaos at bay. Distinctions were sometimes made between
the important state gods, such as Horus or Isis, and the local and
"household" deities, such as Bes and Tawaret. However in practice, the
only major difference between these gods and deities seems to be the lack of
cult places and temples dedicated to the local and household deities. State
religion tended to focus on the concerns of the state and kingship, whereas
local and household deities seem to have been popular with individual ordinary
Egyptians. Most Egyptian gods and
goddesses began their "lives" simply as local deities, with a specific
town or village as being their cult centre. Throughout the vast and complex history of
Egypt, the dominant beliefs of the ancient Egyptians merged and mutated as
leaders of different groups in separate areas of the country would gain power. This process continued even
after the end of the ancient Egyptian civilisation as we know it today.
During the New Kingdom for instance, the separate deities of Re and Amun
commonly "merged" (typically referred to as syncretism) to became known as
Amun-Re. Even when taking part in such a syncretic relationship, the
original god did not necessarily become completely "absorbed" into the
combined deity. Here we've compiled a list of some of the
ancient Egyptian primary deities:
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Amun/Amun Re Depicted as a man, and often shown seated on a throne, wearing a plain deep
circlet headdress from which rise two tall straight plumes. One of the most
important gods in the Egyptian pantheon, his name means "the hidden one". He is first mentioned in the 5th
Dynasty pyramid texts and was originally thought to be simply a veneration of
the concept of air and wind, one of the four fundamental concepts believed to
have composed the primordial universe in the Ogdoad cosmogeny. Gradually
as a god of air, he came to be associated with the breath of life which created
the ba, and as a creator god was titled "father of the gods". The temple of Amun at Karnak is the best surviving religious
complex of the New Kingdom. In the jubilee chapel of Senusret I (1965-1920 BC)
in Karnak, Amun is described as "the king of the gods" and by the
time of the Ptolemies, he was regarded as the Egyptian equivalent of Zeus.
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Anubis Canine god
of the dead, closely associated with embalming and mummification. Originally the
god of the dead before Osiris became associated with the position. Anubis then
became known as one of the sons of Osiris and the "conductor of souls" of the
underworld. In the Old Kingdom pyramid texts of Unas, his role was already very
clear - he was associated with the Eye of Horus and he was already thought to be
the guide of the dead in the afterlife. Usually represented in the
form of a seated black jackal-like dog or man with a black dog's head. It is
still not entirely clear whether the
dog in question - often identified by the Egyptian word "sab" was
indeed a
jackal. The deep black colour of Anubis's head (or body when shown in complete
animal form) is not reflective of his actual colour but is instead symbolic of
his position as a funerary deity. According to myth, the jackal-god was said to have wrapped the body of
the deceased Osiris, thus establishing his particular association with the
mummification process. The priest in charge of the funeral and embalming rights
was known as the "hery
seshta" (overseer of the mysteries), who took the part of the
jackal god Anubis.
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Aten (sun disc) The 18th dynasty pharaoh Amenhotep IV took the name Akhenaten, built a new capital in Middle Egypt and
declared that just a single deity should be worshipped - the sun disk Aten.
Having no human form, the Aten was depicted with arm-like rays that ended in
hands, bestowing life and peace to all. Akhenaten was a philosopher
and a thinker. His father Amenhotep III
had recognised the growing power of the priesthood of Amun and had sought
to curb it - Akhenaten however took matters a lot further by introducing
the new "monothesitic" cult of worship to the sun-disc Aten. This was not
a new idea, as a minor aspect of the sun god Ra-Horakty, the Aten had been
somewhat venerated in the Old Kingdom. Art took on a new distinctive style and
the names of other deities were removed from temple walls in an attempt to
reinforce the idea of the Aten as a single supreme
deity. After the king's death the cult collapsed, and the capital
Akhetaten was abandoned. Religious and political life relocated back to Thebes,
and the cult of Amun was re-instated by the rule of Tutankhamun.
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Atum Creator god and solar deity of
Heliopolis, where he was gradually combined with the sun god Re to become Re-Atum.
In the creation myths, Atum is the primal creator. He arose on a mound out of
Nun, the waters of chaos, and created the first gods, Shu and Tefnut from his
spittle. The Memphite creation myth puts him as the first creation of Ptah, who
simply said his name and he came into being. Atum was revered not only as the
father of the gods but also as the father of the pharaohs. The title "Son of
Atum" was included in the many titles of pharaoh. As such, he was regarded as a protective deity, particularly associated with the
rituals of kingship. Atum lifted the dead king from his pyramid to the heavens
in order to transform him into a star-god, and in later times he protected the
deceased during their journey through the underworld.
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Bast/Bastet
Cat goddess and local deity of
the town of Bubastis, whose name means "she of the bast" (ointment
jar). In her earliest known form, carved on stone vessels of the 2nd Dynasty
ruler Hetepsekhemwy (c.2890 BC) at Saqqara, Bastet was represented as a woman
with the head of a lioness or desert cat, frequently holding both the ankh sign and a sceptre.
By the 1st Millennium BC she was widely portrayed as a cat-headed woman often
carrying a sistrum (rattle) and accompanied by kittens. To those who were in her
favour, she could bestow great blessings, but her wrath was legendary and she
was sometimes listed as one of Re's avenging deities who punish the sinful and
the enemies of Egypt. It was only in the New Kingdom that she was seen to become
a more benevolent deity, adopting the head of a "domestic" cat. Closely
connected (and often confused) with Sekhmet, although distinctly separate
deities, Bast was a goddess from Lower Egypt whilst Sekhmet came from Upper
Egypt.
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Bes A dwarf demi-god, Bes evolved to became a protector against evil spirits
and misfortune. He was depicted in a sometimes androgyne way, with a full face, a
bearded large head, bow legs and sometimes even a bushy tail. He would scare off
any harmful or destructive influences by making a lot of noise with various musical
instruments such as the sistrum, and armaments such as swords and knives. He was closely
associated with Tawaret as a midwife, and as protector of the royal house, he
became a very popular household deity.
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Geb Geb was thought to represent the
earth, he is often seen reclining beneath the sky goddess Nut. Geb was called
"the great cackler" because it was thought his laughter could bring on
earthquakes. He was often depicted lying on the ground under the sky goddess
Nut, or with a goose over his
head. It was in this form
that he was said to have laid the egg from which the sun was hatched. A
fundamental deity of the divine ennead, Geb was the
brother of Nut the sky goddess, and together they produced Osiris, Isis, Nepthys and Seth. The royal throne of Egypt was known as the
"throne of Geb" in
honour of his great reign.
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Hathor Important goddess
generally worshiped in
three forms: as a woman with the ears of a cow, or simply as a cow, or as a woman wearing
a head-dress with wig, horns and sun disc. Hathor was an old protector of music,
dancing and love, and being associated with the cow was considered to be the wife of the sacred
bull Buchis of Armant, personifying fertility and motherhood. As such her
popularity was unbroken during the whole Egyptian history. She and Horus
protected the royal couple and she attended at the arrival of the dead king into
the next world. Her associations and cult centres were
among the most numerous and diverse of any of the Egyptian deities. The literal
meaning of her name was "House of Horus" and since the pharaoh
identified with Horus, Hathor was correspondingly regarded as the divine mother
of each reigning king, and one of the royal titles was "Son of Hathor".
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Hapy/Hapi
Androgynous (asexual) god of the
Inundation (yearly flood), usually
represented as a pot bellied man with pendulous breasts and a head-dress formed
of aquatic plants. He was sometimes coloured blue, black or green to represent
the mud from the Nile, and shown offering fruits and flowers and carrying the
lotus and the papyrus, the symbols of Upper and Lower Egypt respectively. These attributes were designed to represent fertility and the
abundance of produce resulting from the Nile silt left by the receding waters of
the river after the Inundation. Common epithets for Hapy include "master of
the river bringing vegetation" and "lord of the fishes and birds of
the marshes". Although the flood was the source of the country's wealth and
prosperity, no temples or sanctuaries were built specifically in honour of Hapy.
Note: not to be confused with the baboon Hapy, one of the "four sons of Horus" who
protected the deceased's entrails that were stored in canopic jars after mummification.
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Horus
Falcon headed god, usually
depicted as a man with the head of a falcon. Many falcon gods existed throughout
Egypt, though over time a good number of these were assimilated into Horus, the most
important. Horus was an early sky and solar god from Upper
Egypt, worshipped before the unification, and one of the oldest gods in the
Egyptian mythology. As the
god of the sky and the embodiment of divine kingship, Horus was the protector of the
reigning pharaoh. According to one of the most common myths, Horus was the child
of the goddess Isis and the god Osiris. It was Horus who performed the rite of
the "opening of the mouth" on his dead father, thus legitimising his
succession to the throne as an earthly ruler. In a similar vein, priests (or eldest
sons) wearing distinctive panther skins would ritually purify the path of the
deceased's coffin.
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Isis
She was the
daughter of Nut and Geb, the sister and wife to Osiris,
and the mother of Horus. Best known mythologically as the devoted wife of Osiris,
whose body she sought, after his murder by his brother Seth. She is said to have
made the first mummy from the dismembered limbs of Osiris, using her wings to
breathe life into him and magically conceiving her son, Horus in the process.
Her most famous temple is Philae near Aswan, but she was also
widely worshipped universally, with cult centres at Dendera and
Byblos in Syria-Palestine. As the major goddess of the Egyptian pantheon, Isis
had many of the same attributes of other mother-goddesses, and was revered as
the great protector, prayed to for guidance, and beseeched for peace. In
addition to her temples that were found throughout Egypt, many houses also had
shrines to her devotion, and her worship was even taken up by the Greeks and the
Romans.
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Khepri The creator sun-god at dawn is
represented by a scarab (dung) beetle pushing the sun disc upwards from the
underworld. The Ancient Egyptians would have noticed the dung beetles busily
rolling their balls of dirt across the ground. The beetles would lay their eggs
in the dung balls, and emerge
from inside them, apparently spontaneously, so it was quite logical for the
Egyptians to use the beetles to symbolise Khepri "he who is coming into
being", self created of his own accord without undergoing the natural cycle
of reproduction. Khepri, in the form of a gigantic scarab, would roll the sun
like a huge ball across the sky, then roll it down through the underworld to the
eastern horizon. Each morning Khepri would renew the sun so that it could give
life to all the world. As a deity closely associated with resurrection, Khepri
was believed to be swallowed by Nut the sky goddess every evening, where he
would pass through her body to be reborn in the morning.
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Khnum The ram headed god, whose strong
association with the Nile inundation and the fertile soil contributed to his
role as a potter-god. The creative symbolism of moulding pottery, the potency of
the ram, and the fact that the Ancient Egyptian word for ram was "ba"
meant that Khnum was also one of the principle creator gods. The Egyptians
believed that the ram was a very potent animal, and thus Khnum was linked to
fertility. He was also thought to help Re travel through the underworld each
night on his solar barque. Sometimes Khnum was shown modelling the
"ka" on his potter's wheel whilst forming the bodies of humanity.
Khnum's principal cult centre was on the island of Elephantine at Aswan, where
he was possibly worshipped from the Early Dynastic Period.
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Ma'at
Goddess personifying truth,
justice and the harmony of the universe. Usually portrayed as a seated woman
with an ostrich feather, or sometimes simply as a feather, Ma'at represented the divine order of the universe as
originally brought into being at the moment of creation. Ma'at's power was
believed to regulate the seasons, movement of the stars and the relations
between mankind and the gods. Ma'at was an integral part of the "weighing
of the heart" ceremony where the heart of the
deceased sits in one of the trays on the balance scales. The heart is
weighed against either Ma'at or her feather, and if the scales balance
then the deceased may enter the "field of reeds" and enjoy the
afterlife.
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Nephthys
Goddess of the Heliopolitan
"Ennead". Her distinctive head-dress is in fact the heiroglyphs of her
name, "neb-hut" meaning "Lady of the Mansion". She was usually said to have
been the sister of Isis and Osiris and wife of the "evil" god Seth. Despite
being the wife of Seth, she was seen as a loyal sister to Isis and Osiris,
helping Isis to gather Osiris' scattered limbs in an attempt to bring him back
to life. As such, Nephthys became associated with the dead, becoming a friend of
the deceased. She offered guidance to the newly dead, and comfort to the family
of the one who died, and in later tradition was regarded as the mother of Anubis
from a union with Osiris. She was often depicted as a winged goddess, and
sometimes in the form of a bird, making her a solar deity, as well as a deity of
the dead. Nephthys was worshipped widely throughout all of Egypt, though unlike
her sister Isis, she had no formal temple or cult.
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Nut
Sky-goddess, (shown side-on) whose body symbolised
the sky and heavens. Nut was the daughter of Shu and Tefnut, and united with her brother Geb,
gave birth to Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys. Nut's body was thought to be arched
over the earth, with her arms and legs the pillars of the sky, and her hands and
feet thought to touch the four cardinal points at the horizon. Every evening she swallowed the setting sun, Re, and every
morning gave birth to him again. Depictions of this act are often found on the
ceilings of temples, as well as in the royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings,
where they are accompanied on the walls by the nightly journey of the sun
through the underworld.
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Osiris
One of the most important
deities of Ancient Egypt, whose principle association is with death,
resurrection and fertility. He is usually depicted as a mummy whose hands
project through his wrappings to hold the royal insignia of the crook and flail.
Osiris was once an earthly ruler who governed well, and so aroused the jealousy
of his evil brother Seth. Seth secretly discovered the measurements of his
brother's body, had a magnificent casket made to fit Osiris, and organised a
banquet to which he invited 72 accomplices as well as Osiris. During
the feast he declared that whoever fitted the casket exactly should have it as a
gift. Osiris stepped into the coffin and the lid was sealed with molten lead.
Cast into the Nile it drifted to Byblos and caught in a cedar tree. Seth
stumbled on the casket and angrily dismembered the body of his brother. Isis
then searched for the pieces of her husband, and reassembled the body into a mummy, magically conceived Horus,
who was said to have avenged his father's death in a series of contests
with his uncle. According to the myths, these struggles lasted for eighty years
until Osiris was finally declared ruler of the underworld and Horus confirmed as
ruler of the living, leaving Seth to rule the deserts as the god of chaos and
evil.
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Ptah Creator god of
Memphis, usually
portrayed as a mummy with a tassle and a distinctive skull cap. His hands
emerge from wrappings in front of his body holding a staff
that combines the "djed" pillar, the "ankh" sign and
"was" sceptre. From the Middle Kingdom (2055-1650 BC) onwards,
Ptah was represented with a straight beard. It was Ptah who was credited with
having devised the "opening of the mouth" ceremony. Although
associated predominantly with Memphis, Ptah is a universal deity found on all
major sites in Egypt and Nubia.
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Re The old
solar-god from Heliopolis and a major deity all over Egypt. He would travel
across the sky every day in his solar barque with his life-giving sun disc. He
stood for life, rebirth and was usually represented
as a hawk-headed human figure wearing a sun-disc headdress. Re exerted such a
strong influence on the rest of the Egyptian pantheon that virtually all of the
most significant deities were eventually subsumed into the sun-cult by a process
of "syncretism", thus Amun became Amun-Re and Horus became Re-Horakhty.
It was during the reign of Akhenaten (1352-1336 BC) that the concept of
the sun god as a universal deity into whom all other deities could be absorbed
took place. The "aten" (disc) is represented as a sun-disc from which arms
stretch down, offering life and power to the royal family and is perhaps most famously portrayed upon the art and treasures of Tutankhamun.
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Sekhmet The popular goddess of war,
usually depicted as a woman with the head of a lioness and sometimes with the
sun disc and/or a cobra on top of her head. She was the sister and wife of Ptah,
and was created by the fire of Re's eye as a weapon of vengeance to destroy
mankind for their wicked ways and disobedience to him. In order to placate
Sekhmet's wrath, her priesthood performed a ritual before a different statue of
her on each day of the year. It was said that her priests protected her statues
by coating them with anthrax, and so she became associated as a bringer of
disease, and placating her was thought to cure such ills. The name "Sekhmet"
literally became synonymous with doctors and surgeons during the Middle Kingdom.
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Seshat
The goddess of writing and measurement, usually
represented as a woman in a long panther skin dress and wearing a head-dress
with a distinctive seven pointed star underneath a bow. Reliefs from the Old and
Middle Kingdoms show her recording quantities of foreign captives and booty. As
the divine measurer and scribe, she was believed to assist pharaoh in both these
practices. Seshat recorded, by notching her palm, the time allotted to him by
the gods for his stay on earth, and during the New Kingdom, she was involved in
pharaoh's jubilee "sed" festival. She also assisted the pharaoh in the "Pedj
Shes" ritual (literally "stretching the cord" which was a ceremony performed to
work out the correct alignment for building temples), as well as recording the
speeches made during crowning.
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Seth/Set Originally a local god of
storms from upper Egypt, he evolved into the god of chaos and confusion,
generally depicted with a human body and the head of a mysterious unknown
animal, probably a mythical beast. Seth was the son of the sky-goddess Nut and
the brother of Osiris, Isis and Nephthys (who was also his wife). According to
the legend, Seth murdered his brother Osiris and was involved in a long and
violent contest with his nephew Horus who sought to avenge the death of his
father. Laying outside the "ordered universe" governed by Horus (ruler
of the living) and Osiris (ruler of the underworld), Seth served as the
necessary complement to divine order. In the New Kingdom he gained prominence
when several rulers took his name - Seti.
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Sobek
Crocodile god, either portrayed
as a crocodile (often on a shrine or altar) or as a man with a crocodile's head,
often wearing an elaborate head-dress consisting of the horned sun-disc and upright
feathers. Originally a demon, as crocodiles were such feared creatures in a
nation so dependent on the Nile, his worship began as an attempt to pacify the
crocodile and so reduce the danger it posed. Gradually Sobek came to symbolise
the produce of the Nile, and the fertility that it brought to the land, and so
his status quickly became more ambiguous. Sometimes the ferocity of a crocodile
was seen in a positive light, and such, Sobek was considered a patron of the
army, representing strength and power. During the 12th and 13th Dynasties, the cult of Sobek was given
particular prominence, as the names of such rulers as Sobekhotep and Sobekneferu
indicate.
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Tawaret
Household deity in the form of
a female hippopotamus who was particularly associated with the protection of
women in childbirth. Since childbirth was a particularly dangerous time in the
lives of ordinary people, it is not surprising that Tawaret was one of the most
popular household deities from the Old Kingdom onwards. She was often shown
holding the "sa" hieroglyph of protection or the ankh hieroglyph of life. She
was thought to assist women in labour by using magic to scare off demons and
evil spirits that might harm the vulnerable mother or child.
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Thoth
God of writing and knowledge,
depicted in the form of two animals: the baboon and the sacred ibis. By the end
of the Old Kingdom he was most frequently portrayed as an ibis-headed man,
usually holding a scribal palette and a pen or a notched palm leaf. He was also
often shown recording the results of the "weighing of the heart" of
the deceased, and sometimes in addition, he is shown as a baboon perched on top
of the scales. Thoth was a lunar deity and is often depicted wearing the lunar
crescent on his head. Worshipped widely throughout all of Egypt, his cult centre
was Hermopolis.
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