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TOP 20 Most Famous Egyptian Gods and Goddesses [1 BONUS]
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Egyptian Gods and Goddesses
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In the beginning was Atoum, the sun. He had created himself by coming out of the great primordial ocean, the Nun.
Then Atum created Shu, the deity of breath, and Tefnut, the deity of moisture. Cabbage separated heaven and earth. Thus were born Nut, goddess of the sky, and Geb, god of the earth.
Nut and Geb had two sons, Osiris and Set, and two daughters, Isis and Nephthys.
Osiris was the first pharaoh and reigned with his wife Isis in peace and Wisdom. Set was jealous and murdered his brother Osiris.
Isis resurrected her husband and conceived a child, Horus; Horus avenged his father by challenging Set to a duel. Osiris withdrew into darkness and became ruler of the kingdom of the dead.
The invisible world of the gods is a replica of the earthly world. Through Pharaoh, their heir and representative on earth, the gods guarantee universal harmony.
Life, not death, is the ultimate reason for Egyptian religion. From the beginning, Egyptians felt a sense of divine and cosmic unity, dominated by the great god, let him be called Atum, the creator, Ra, and Amun, the solar god.
The god is the personification of life, of universal energy, and like it, he is multifaceted. In a world where chaos is feared to overturn the universal order, divine action plays the role of the supreme guardian.
Its mission is to safeguard life, and the supremacy of the forces of good, to ensure that the original balance, that of the cosmos, of nature, and of humanity, is maintained.
Pharaoh's people infinitely reproduce the representations of the omnipresent God. The gods of Egypt intervene in all natural events, and are part of the daily life of mankind.
The deities are responsible for the beneficial flooding of the Nile, good or bad harvests, diseases and plagues.
The gods are responsible for the beneficial flooding of the Nile, for the good or bad harvests, for the most diverse diseases and plagues, and it is thanks to their intervention that the Sun and the Light revolve in their orbit, that the cycle of the seasons repeats itself immutably.
All the gods are part of nature and are deeply rooted in their lands. They are the lords familiarly honored.
The system of worship allows every Egyptian to go to the nearest shrine and speak in privacy to his local god.
The gods of ancient Egypt appear in a mixed form: animal-headed figures or human-headed animals. The human form of the gods makes them accessible, closer to people, and more open to their daily concerns. Their animal appearance is a metaphor for their function.
Some gods of ancient Egypt
1. Osiris
He is one of the four children of Nout and Geb. An earthly king who became sovereign of the kingdom of the dead, he bears the attributes of his function as an all-powerful master. He holds the scepter in one hand and the whip in the other.
2. Isis
Sister and wife of Osiris, Isis is both goddess and magician. She triumphs over death by resurrecting Osiris. She is the universal mother, the one who gives birth to all living beings. Isis is identified with Hathor and is depicted as a woman carrying the horns of the cow goddess enclosing the solar disc.
3. Anubis
He is depicted as a man with the head of a jackal or a dog. He exclusively presides over the funeral cult. He protects the deceased, welcomes them into the afterlife and leads them before Osiris with whom he carries out the judgment of the dead by weighing their hearts. Anubis is the undisputed master of all mummification rites and techniques. He is the god of embalming, a rite he first practiced on Osiris.
4. Maât
Represented by a young woman wearing an ostrich feather, Maat personifies truth and justice, two inseparable and necessary virtues for the good order of society and the world. His role is to annihilate the principle that is opposed to him, disorder. Maat is the intangible cohesive force that makes everything in its place. It is the universal morality respected and adored by all.
5. Ra/Re
The name of this god is written Ra. Master of the gods, Ra travels the sky from East to West to dispense the light and heat of the sun.
6. Ptah
At the beginning of time, Ptah pre-existed everything. Ptah, the creator of the universe, contains within him the vegetable seeds and all the constituents of nature. He gave birth to the gods, arranged the offerings and built the cities. Ptah is naturally the patron of artists, he is also the god of craftsmen.
7. Bastet
Benefactor and protector of humanity, Bastet is the musician goddess of joy. She is represented as a cat, but also sometimes as a lioness; Bastet is the patroness of the home, the goddess of motherhood, fertility and multiple female virtues.
8. Thoth
Thoth is represented in the form of a man with the head of ibis. Secretary of the gods, Thot is the clerk of all ritual and divine ceremonies. Patron of arithmetic and numbers, Thot is thus "accountant of time". Inventor of writing, he is the lord of the texts preserved in the temples.
9. Geb
Geb is worshipped in the guise of a man who sometimes wears a goose on his head, the hieroglyphic sign of his name. Master of minerals and plants. Above all, he plays a theological role personifying one of the four elements that are at the origin of the creation of the world.
10. Nout
She is shown as a woman with a body curved in an arc, her arms hanging down toward the setting sun, and her feet toward the rising sun. Her body covered with stars personifies the celestial vault.
11. Khnum
Represented as a ram-headed man, the god personifies generating power, presides over the birth of children and ensures the fecundity of herds.
12. Horus
Son of Isis and Osiris, Horus is the master of the earthly kingdom. He embodies the dynamic aspect of the pharaoh and his duties. He is represented as a human with the head of a falcon, a celestial animal par excellence.
13. Bes
Bes is the protector of the home. He is the popular deity par excellence. A grimacing dwarf, he was not very popular during the Old and Middle Kingdom. Its protective function will be enormously solicited in the homes, from the New Empire, but it is especially in the low period that Bes will become a full-fledged god to whom sanctuaries will be dedicated.
14. Sekhmet
Goddess with the head of a lioness and the body of a woman, she is well known for her irascible character. She is endowed with immense powers. Her name means "the mighty one", and therefore she attracts and frightens. Among the great divine figures of Ancient Egypt, Sekhmet fascinates by her extreme contradictions, between protection and destruction.
15. Mut
The goddess Mout, divine mother, tender or feline, is particularly venerated from the New Kingdom onwards. Temples are dedicated to her, the most famous of which is the temple at Karnak. Mout is represented as a woman with a human head or a lioness head. Mout is equated with mother, motherhood, and the Wisdom of the matron.
16. Atum
Atoum created the world. Primitive deity of the holy city of Heliopolis, he is the solar character par excellence, the personification of the order emanating from the original chaos, the image of the potter of the universe. Without him, no Egypt. In the very first days of Egypt, Atoum is represented in the form of a man wearing the crown of kings. He is the personification of the blazing sun, the primordial god.
17. Nephthys
Her name means "lady of the house", that is to say "the one who watches over the necropolis". Sister of Isis and Osiris, she is the wife of Seth, his other brother.
18. Hathor
She is certainly one of the most popular goddesses of Egypt. The number of temples dedicated to her, including that of Denderah, her preferred stronghold, is commensurate with the image she transmits. She is likened to a multitude of local deities, making her appear in various forms. Hathor is also the protector of several nomes.
19. Seth
Set is one of the oldest gods of Egypt. Murderer of Osiris, his brother, whose throne he usurps, he is hated as a representation of evil. "God of storms and thunderstorms", "master of the desert", he nevertheless has his place in the Egyptian pantheon as the incarnation of the forces and negative elements indispensable to the balance of the world. Set is represented as an unidentified, probably imaginary animal. Its slender body, long, forked, arrow-shaped tail, long, bushy muzzle, and long, straight ears are reminiscent of hares, oryx, and donkeys.
20. Sobek
Voracious god of the marshes, Sobek, who takes the form of the crocodile, keeps throughout the history of Egypt an ambiguous character. In the Fayoum and other swampy regions of the country, it is a deity linked to the sun, a god of water and fertility venerated in places where crocodiles swarmed. Sobek is a solitary god who has little relationship with his fellow men. He has the violent character of the crocodile, which makes him the defender of the sun god against the forces of chaos, but also a dangerous being.
21. Amon
Amun is arguably the most popular god of ancient Egypt, originally a simple obscure deity of the Theban region, he became a state god at the beginning of the New Kingdom. His prestige grew, and his clergy remained the richest until 664 B.C., when the Assyrians destroyed Thebes.
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