Amen
(Amon, Amun, Ammon, Amoun) Amen's name means "The Hidden One." Amen was the
patron deity of the city of Thebes from earliest times, and was viewed
(along with his consort Amenet) as a primordial creation-deity by the
Up to the Middle Kingdom Amen was merely a local
god in Thebes; but when the Thebans had established their sovereignty in
Egypt, Amen became a prominent deity, and by Dynasty XVIII was
Amen was self-created, according to later traditions;
according to the older Theban traditions, Amen was created by Thoth as
one of the eight primordial deities of creation (Amen, Amenet, Heq, Heqet,
During the New Kingdom, Amen's consort was Mut,
"Mother," who seems to have been the Egyptian equivalent of the "Great
Mother" archetype. The two thus formed a pair reminiscent of the
See also Amen-Ra, Khons, Thoth.
Amen-Ra (Amon-Re) A composite deity, devised by the priests of Amen as an attempt to link New Kingdom (Dyn.XVIII-XXI) worship of Amen with the older solar cult of the god Ra. In a union of this sort, the deities are said to indwell one another - so we have the power represented by Amen manifesting through the person of Ra (or vice versa). This sort of relationship is common among Egyptian gods, particularly among cosmic or national deities. It is an example of how the Egyptian gods are viewed, as Morenz puts it, of having "personality but not individuality." See also Amen, Ra.
Amset (Imsety, Mestha; Golden Dawn, Ameshet) One of the Four Sons of Horus, Amset was represented as a mummified man. He was the protector of the liver of the deceased, and was protected by the goddess Isis. See also Four Sons of Horus, Isis.
Anubis (Anpu; Golden Dawn, Ano-Oobist) Anubis (Greek, from Egyptian Anpu) was the son
of Nephthys: by some traditions, the father was Set; by others, Osiris.
(And by still other traditions his mother was Isis.) Anubis was depicted
as a
Owing perhaps to the jackal's tendency to prowl around tombs, he became associated with the dead, and by the Old Kingdom, Anubis was worshipped as the inventor of embalming, who had embalmed the dead Osiris, thus helping preserve him in order to live again. His task became to glorify and preserve all the dead. Anubis was also worshipped under the form Upuaut ("Opener of the Ways"), sometimes with a rabbit's head, who conducted the souls of the dead to their judgement, and who monitored the Scales of Truth to protect the dead from the second death in the underworld. See also Nephthys, Osiris, Set.
Anuket In Upper Egypt, around Elephantine, Anuket was worshipped as the companion (generally the daughter) of Khnum and Sati. Her sacred animal was the gazelle. She was believed to be the dispenser of cool water, and wore a feathered crown on her human head. See also Khnum, Sati.
Apis An early deity, probably the best known Egyptian deity represented only as an animal, and never as a human with an animal's head. Apis was most closely linked with Ptah, and his cult center was Memphis. He was primarily a deity of fertility. He was represented as a bull crowned with the solar disk and uraeus-serpent. A sacred Apis bull was kept in Memphis, and there is a great mass burial of Apis bulls, the Serapeum, located there. See also Ptah.
Aten (Aton) The sun itself, recognized first in the Middle
Kingdom, and later becoming an aspect of the sun god. In the reign of Amenhotep
IV during Dynasty XVIII, Aten was depicted as a disk with rays, each ray
terminating in a human hand and bestowing symbols of "life" upon those
below. Aten was declared the only true deity during this period, but the
worship of Amen and the other deities was restored by Amenhotep IV's successor
Tutankhamen. Morenz believes the name "Aten" was pronounced something like
"Yati" during the height of its cult.
Atum A primordial creator god, worshipped as the head of the Heliopolitan family of gods. Father of Shu and Tefnut, and in later times believed to be one with the sun god Ra. See also Ra.
(Bastet) A cat-goddess, worshiped in the Delta city of Bubastis. A protectress of cats and those who cared for cats. As a result, an important deity in the home (since cats were prized pets) and also important in the iconography (since the serpents which attack the sun god were usually represented in papyri as being killed by cats). She was viewed as the beneficient side of the lioness-goddess
Sekhmet. See also Sekhmet.
Bes A deity of either African or Semitic origin; came to Egypt by Dynasty XII. Depicted as a bearded, savage-looking yet comical dwarf, shown full-face in images (highly unusual by Egyptian artistic conventions). Revered as a deity of household pleasures such as music, good food, and relaxation. Also a protector and entertainer of children.(Tuamutef; Golden Dawn, Thmoomathph) One of the Four Sons of Horus, Duamutef was represented
as a mummified man with the head of a jackal. He was the protector of the
stomach of the deceased, and was protected by the goddess
See also Four Sons of Horus, Neith.
A serpent goddess of the Delta, a symbol and protrectress of Lower Egypt, the counterpart of Nekhbet in Upper Egypt, worn as part of the king's crown. See also Nekhbet.
The four sons of Horus were the protectors of the parts
of the body of Osiris, and from this, became the protectors of the body
of the deceased. They were: Amset, Hapi, Duamutef, and Qebhsenuef.
See also Amset, Duamutef, Hapi, Qebehsenuf.
The god of the earth, son of Shu and Tefnut, brother
and husband of Nut, and father of Osiris, Set, Isis, and Nephthys. Sacred
animal and symbol was the goose. He is generally represented as a man
See also Nut.
See Horus of Behedet.
Hapi (Golden Dawn, Ahephi) One of the Four Sons of Horus, Hapi was represented as a mummified man with the head of a baboon. He was the protector of the lungs of the deceased, and was protected by the goddess Nephthys. The name Hapi, spelled with different hieroglyphs, in most but not all cases, is also the name of the god who was the personification of the River Nile, depicted as a corpulent man (fat signifying abundance) with a crown of lilies (Upper Nile) or papyrus plants (Lower Nile). See also Four Sons of Horus, Nephthys.
Hathor (Het-heru, Het-Hert) A very old goddess of Egypt, worshiped as a cow-deity
from earliest times. The name "Hathor" is the Greek corruption of the variants
Het-Hert ("the House Above") and Het-Heru ("the House of
See also Isis.
Harpocrates (Hor-pa-kraat; Golden Dawn, Hoor-par-kraat) "Horus the Child", the son of Isis and Osiris as
a little suckling child, distinguished from Horus the Elder,
who was the patron deity of Upper Egypt. Represented as a young boy with
a child's sidelock
See also Horus.
Heqet A primordial goddess with the head of a frog, worshipped as one of the Eight Gods at Hermopolis, and seen as the consort of Khnum at Antinoe. See also Khnum.
Heru-ra-ha A composite deity in Crowley's quasi-Egyptian mythology;
composed of Ra-Hoor-Khuit and Hoor-par-kraat. The name, translated
into Egyptian, means something approximating "Horus and Ra be Praised!"
Of course, this could simply be another corruption due to the inferior
Victorian understanding of the Egyptian language, and it is possible Crowley
had something entirely different in
See also Ra-Horakhty, Harpocrates.
Horus (Hor) One of the most important deities of Egypt. As
the Child, Horus is the son of Osiris and Isis, who, upon reaching adulthood,
avenges his father's death, by defeating and castrating his evil uncle
Set. He
As Heru-Ur, "Horus the Elder", he was the patron
deity of Upper (Southern) Egypt from the earliest times; initially, viewed
as the twin brother of Set (the patron of Lower Egypt), but he became the
See also Isis, Osiris, Set.
Horus of Behedet (Hadit) A form of Horus worshipped in the city of Behdet,
shown in the well-known form of a solar disk with a great pair of wings,
usually seen hovering above important scenes in Egyptian religious art.
Made popular by Aleister Crowley under the poorly transliterated name "Hadit",
the god appears to have been a way of depicting the omnipresence of Horus.
As Crowley says in Magick in Theory and
See also Horus.
Imhotep was the architect, physician, scribe, and grand vizier of the IIIrd Dynasty pharaoh Zoser. It was Imhotep who conceived and built the Step Pyramid at Sakkara. In the Late Period, Imhotep was worshipped as the son of Ptah and a god of medicine, as well as the patron (with Thoth) of scribes. The Greeks considered him to be Asklepios. See also Ptah, Thoth.
Isis (Auset) Perhaps the most important goddess of all Egyptian
mythology, Isis assumed, during the course of Egyptian history, the attributes
and functions of virtually every other important goddess in the land.
Isis was responsible for protecting Horus from Set during his infancy; for helping Osiris to return to life; and for assisting her husband to rule in the land of the Dead. Her cult seems to have originally centered, like
her husband's, at Abydos near the Delta in the North (Lower Egypt); she
was adopted into the family of Ra early in Egyptian history by the priests
of
See also Horus, Osiris.
(Keper) The creator-god, according to early Heliopolitan
cosmology; assimilated with Atum and Ra. The Egyptian root "kheper" signifies
several things, according to context, most notably the verb "to create"
or "to transform", and also the word for "scarab beetle". The scarab, or
dung beetle, was considered symbolic of the sun since it rolled a ball
of dung in which it laid its eggs around with it - this was
See also Ra.
Khnum Appearing as a ram-headed human, Khnum was worshipped most at Antinoe and Elephantine. He was another creator-god, represented as fashioning human beings on his pottery wheel. His consort was variously Heqet, Neith, or Sati. See also Sati.
Khons (Chons) The third member (with his parents Amen and Mut) of the great triad of Thebes. Khons was the god of the moon. The best-known story about him tells of him playing the ancient game senet ("passage") against Thoth, and wagering a portion of his light. Thoth won, and because of losing some of his light, Khons cannot show his whole glory for the entire month, but must wax and wane. The main temple in the enclosure at Karnak is dedicated to him. See also Amen, Mut, Thoth.
anthropomorphic personification of the concept maat and as such has little mythology. Maat was represented as a tall woman with an ostrich feather (the glyph for her name) in her hair. She was present at the judgement of the dead; her feather was balanced against the heart of the deceased to determine whether he had led a pure and honest life. See also Thoth.
Min (Menu, Amsu) A form of Amen depicted holding a flail (thought
to represent a thunderbolt in Egyptian art) and with an erect penis; his
full name was often given as Menu-ka-mut-f ("Min, Bull of his Mother").
Min was worshiped as the god of virility; lettuces were offered as sacrifice
to him and then eaten in hopes of procuring manhood; and he was worshiped
as the husband of the goddess Qetesh, goddess of love
See also Amen, Qetesh.
Month (Mentu, Men Thu) The principal god of Thebes before the rise of
the Amen cult; appeared as a falcon-headed man and often united with Horus.
Primarily a war god.
Mut (Golden Dawn, Auramooth) The wife of Amen in Theban tradition; the word mut in Egyptian means "mother", and she was the mother of Khonsu, the moon god. See also Amen, Khons.
The youthful son of Ptah and Sekhmet, connected with the rising sun; depicted as a youth crowned with or seated upon a lotus blossom. See also Ptah.
Neith (Net, Neit; Golden Dawn, Thoum-aesh-neith) A very ancient goddess of war, worshiped in the Delta; revered as a goddess of wisdom, identified with Athena by the Greeks; in later traditions, the sister of Isis, Nephthys, and Selket, and protectress of Duamutef, the god of the stomach of the deceased. Mother of the crocodile god Sobek. See also Sobek.
Nekhbet Upper Egyptian patron goddess, represented as a vulture in iconography, and often part of the crown of the pharaoh, along with her Lower Egyptian counterpart Edjo. See also Edjo.
Nephthys (Nebt-het) The youngest child of Geb and Nut. The sister and
wife of Set, and sister of Isis and Osiris; also the mother (variantly
by Set or by Osiris) of Anubis. She abandoned Set when he killed Osiris,
and
See also Isis, Osiris, Set.
Nut (Nuit) The goddess of the sky, daughter of Shu and Tefnut, sister and wife of Geb, mother of Osiris, Set, Isis, and Nephthys. Described by Crowley in his Magick in Theory and Practice thus: "Infinite space is called the goddess NUIT." Nut was generally depicted as a woman with blue skin, and her body covered with stars, standing on all fours, leaning over her husband, representing the sky arched over the earth. Her relationship to Hadit is an invention of Crowley's with no basis in Egyptology, save only that Hadit was often depicted underneath Nut - one finds Nut forming the upper frame of a scene, and the winged disk Hadit floating beneath, silently as always. This is an artistic convention, and there was no marriage between the two in Egyptian myth. See also Geb, Shu.
The god of the dead, and the god of the resurrection
into eternal life; ruler, protector, and judge of the deceased, and his
prototype (the deceased was in historical times usually referred to as
"the
Osiris was the first child of Nut and Geb, thus the brother of Set, Nephthys, and Isis, who was also his wife. By Isis he fathered Horus, and according to some stories, Nephthys assumed the form of Isis, seduced him thus, and from their union was born Anubis. Osiris ruled the world of men in the beginning, after Ra had abandoned the world to rule the skies, but he was murdered by his brother Set. Through the magic of Isis, he was made to live again. Being the first living thing to die, he subsequently became lord of the dead. His death was avenged by his son Horus, who defeated Set and cast him out into the desert to the West of Egypt (the Sahara). Prayers and spells were addressed to Osiris throughout
Egyptian history, in hopes of securing his blessing and entering the afterlife
which he ruled; but his popularity steadily increased through the
See also Anubis, Horus, Isis, Nephthys, Set.
(deified kings) From earliest times in Egypt the pharaohs were
worshipped as gods: the son of Ra, the son of Horus, the son of Amen, etc.
depending upon what period of Egyptian history and what part of the country
Ptah Worshipped in Memphis from the earliest dynastic
times (c.3100 BC), Ptah was seen as the creator of the universe in the
Memphite cosmology. He fashioned the bodies in which dwelt the souls of
men
Ptah is depicted as a bearded man wearing a skullcap,
shrouded much like a mummy, with his hands emerging from the wrappings
in front and holding the Uas (phoenix-headed) scepter, an Ankh, and a
He was said to be the husband of Sekhmet and the
father of Nefertum (and later Imhotep).
(Kabexnuf, Qebsneuef) One of the Four Sons of Horus, Qebhsenuef was represented
as a mummified man with the head of a falcon. He was the protector of the
intestines of the deceased, and was protected by the goddess
See also Four Sons of Horus, Selket.
Qetesh Originally believed to be a Syrian deity, Qetesh
was a goddess of love and beauty. Qetesh was depicted as a beautiful nude
woman, standing or riding upon a lion, holding flowers, a mirror, or
See also Min.
signify the "almighty God." Very early in Egyptian history Ra was identified with Horus, who as a hawk or falon-god represented the loftiness of the skies. Ra is represented either as a hawk-headed man or as a hawk. In order to travel through the waters of Heaven and the Underworld, Ra was depicted as traveling in a boat. During dynastic Egypt Ra's cult center was Annu
(Hebrew "On", Greek "Heliopolis", modern-day "Cairo"). In Dynasty V, the
first king, Userkaf, was also Ra's high priest, and he added the term
Ra was father of Shu and Tefnut, grandfather of Nut and Geb, great-grandfather of Osiris, Set, Isis, and Nephthys, and great-great-grandfather to Horus. In later periods (about Dynasty 18 on) Osiris and Isis superceded him in popularity, but he remained Ra netjer-aa neb-pet ("Ra, the great God, Lord of Heaven") whether worshiped in his own right or, in later times, as one aspect of the Lord of the Universe, Amen-Ra. See also Amen-Ra, Horus.
Ra-Horakhty (Ra-Hoor-Khuit) "Ra, who is Horus of the Horizons." An appelation of Ra, identifying him with Horus, showing the two as manifestations of the singular Solar Force. The spelling "Ra-Hoor-Khuit" was popularized by Aleister Crowley, first in the Book of the Law (Liber AL vel Legis). See also Horus, Ra.
The goddess of Elephantine, and the consort of
Khnum. Together with their companion Anuket, dispenser of cool water. Represented
with human head, the crown of Upper Egypt, and the horns of
See also Anuket, Khnum.
Seker A god of light, protector of the spirits of the
dead passing through the Underworld en route to the afterlife. Seker was
worshiped in Memphis as a form of Ptah or as part of the compound deities
See also Ptah.
Sekhmet A lioness-goddess, worshiped in Memphis as the
wife of Ptah; created by Ra from the fire of his eyes as a creature of
vengeance to punish mankind for his sins; later, became a peaceful protectress
See also Bast, Ptah.
Selket (Serqet, Serket) A scorpion-goddess, shown as a beautiful woman
with a scorpion poised on her head; her creature struck death to the wicked,
but she was also petitioned to save the lives of innocent people stung
by
She was the protectress of Qebehsenuf, the son of Horus who guarded the intestines of the deceased. She was made famous by her statue from Tutankhamen's tomb, which was part of the collection which toured America in the 1970's. See also Isis.
Serapis A Ptolemaic period god, devised by the Greeks from Osiris and Apis. Supposedly the consort of Isis, god of the afterlife and fertility. Also physician and helper of distressed worshippers. Neverobtained much following from the native Egyptian population. His cult center was Alexandria. See also Apis, Osiris.
Set (Seth) In earliest times, Set was the patron deity of
Lower (Northern) Egypt, and represented the fierce storms of the desert
whom the Lower Egyptians sought to appease. However, when Upper Egypt
Set was the brother of Osiris, Isis, and Nephthys, and husband of the latter; according to some versions of the myths he is also father of Anubis. Set is best known for murdering his brother and attempting to kill his nephew Horus; Horus, however, managed to survive and grew up to avenge his father's death by establishing his rule over all Egypt, castrating Set, and casting him out into the lonely desert for all time. In the 19th Dynasty there began a resurgence of
respect for Set, and he was seen as a great god once more, the god who
benevolently restrained the forces of the desert and protected Egypt from
See also Anubis, Horus, Isis, Nephthys, Osiris.
Shu The god of the atmosphere and of dry winds, son of Ra, brother and husband of Tefnut, father of Geb and Nut. Represented in hieroglyphs by an ostrich feather (similar to Maat's), which he is usually shown wearing on his head. He is generally shown standing on the recumbent Geb, holding aloft his daughter Nut, separating the two. The name "Shu" is probably related to the root shu meaning "dry, empty." Shu also seems to be a personification of the sun's light. Shu and Tefnut were also said to be but two halves of one soul, perhaps the earliest recorded example of "soulmates." See also Tefnut.
Sobek The crocodile-god, worshipped at the city of Arsinoe,
called Crocodilopolis by the Greeks. Sobek was worshipped to appease him
and his animals. According to some evidence, Sobek was considered a fourfold
deity who represented the four elemental gods (Ra of fire, Shu of air,
Geb of earth, and Osiris of water). In the Book of the Dead, Sobek assists
in the birth of Horus; he fetches Isis and Nephthys to protect the deceased;
and he aids in the destruction of Set.
Sothis Feminine Egyptian name for the star Sirius, which very early meshed with Isis (being the consort of Sahu-Osiris, which was Orion). Also associated with Hathor. See also Hathor, Isis.
The goddess of moisture and clouds, daughter of
Ra, sister and wife of Shu, mother of Geb and Nut. Depicted as a woman
with the head of a lioness, which was her sacred animal. The name "Tefnut"
See also Shu.
Thoth (Tahuti) The god of wisdom, Thoth was said to be self-created
at the beginning of time, along with his consort Maat (truth), or perhaps
created by Ra. At Hermopolis it was said that from Thoth were produced
eight children, of which the most important was Amen, "the hidden one",
who was worshiped in Thebes as the Lord of the Universe. The name "Thoth"
is the Greek corruption of the original
Thoth served in Osirian myths as the vizier (chief advisor and minister) of Osiris. He, like Khons, is a god of the moon, and is also the god of time, magic, and writing. He was considered the inventor of the hieroglyphs. See also Amen, Maat.
Thoueris (Ta-urt)A hippopotamus goddess, responsible for fertility and protecting women in childbirth. Partner of Bes. See also Bes. |