Mythology/Egyptian Mythology/Deities

General Characteristics edit

Egyptian deities are often portrayed as having animal heads in art; as an example, Anubis is often portrayed in statuary as having the body of a human, but the head of a jackal. Many gods were portrayed with different animal heads, depending upon the situation. The Egyptians did not actually believe that most of their gods had animal heads; rather, they portrayed them that way as a representation of their dualism, both being a human or humanistic, and having an animal associated with them. This may have been for the benefit of the illiterate.

Descriptions and Unique Traits edit

 
Anubis

Anubis: God of Embalming, Friend of the Dead, originally god of the dead

Details: The son of Ra and Hathor, Anubis was the first god of the underworld. He was most often portrayed as a man with the head of a jackal but sometimes appeared as fully human or jackal. In later mythology he was replaced as king of the dead by Osiris. Instead he became the gatekeeper to the underworld and protector of souls. One of Anubis's duties was to weigh the heart of the dead against the feather of Ma'at. If the heart weighed the same as the feather, the person being subjected to the test would enter the Field of Reeds, and could enjoy the afterlife. If not they would suffer destruction, and would not exist.




The Aten
The embodiment of the Sun's rays in a brief, monotheistic interlude
Apep
Serpent of the Underworld, enemy of Ra
Atum
A creator deity, and the setting sun
Bastet
Goddess of Cats and Women also called Bast and Ailuros
Bes
God-Demon of Protection, Childbirth and Entertainment
The Four sons of Horus
Protective deities personified in the canopic jars:
  • Duamutef
(guardian of the stomach)
  • Imsety
(guardian of the liver)
  • Hapi
(guardian of the lungs)
  • Qebsennuef
(guardian of the intestine)
Geb
God of the Earth
Hapy
God of the Nile and Fertility
Hathor
Goddess of Love and Music
Heget
Goddess of Childbirth
Horus
The falcon-headed god, son of Osiris and Isis; protects pharaohs
Imhotep
God of wisdom, medicine and magic
Isis
Goddess of Magic, sister of Nephthys
Khepry
The scarab beetle, the embodiment of the dawn
Khnum
A creator deity
Maahes
God of war
Ma'at
Concept of Truth, Balance and Order, sometimes depicted as a goddess. See Anubis for more information on her work in the afterlife.
Menhit
Goddess of war
Min
God of fertility
Mont
God of war
Naunet | Nu
The primal waters
Neith
Goddess of war, then great mother goddess
Nephthys
Mother of Anubis
Nut
Goddess of heaven and the sky
Osiris
God of the underworld, fertility and agricultural, maternal brother of Anubis
Details: Osiris was the second king of the underworld and one of the four children of the earth (Geb) and the sky (Nuit), and was the husband of Isis, who represented life. As god of the dead, Babi, the god who devoured unworthy souls, was described as his first-born son.In art, since he was representative of death, Osiris was usually depicted as a mummified man, with a beard, and, as ruler of the underworld, was also given the symbols of kingship - the crown, flail, and crozier. Usually, he also was depicted as having green skin, a reference to rotting flesh, and thus to death.
Ptah
a creator deity
Details: Ptah, in Egyptian mythology (specifically Memphite), is the creator god. He existed before time was time and began the world. His creation of the world was seen as procreative, although he initially existed alone. Due to this fact, his hand was assigned feminine qualities, and was in itself worshipped as a goddess. Ptah was the patron deity of craftsmen, as everything he created was created by his mind alone.
Ra
the sun, possible father of Anubis
Details : For much of Egyptian history, Ra was the chief of gods. He controlled day and night, the passage of time, and the continual cycle of death and rebirth. However, his appearance as the sun god was just one of his many aspects. He was worshipped as a creator, as an ancestor to the pharaohs, and as many other things. He was also called amun ra.
Sekhmet
goddess of war and battles
Sobek
Crocodile God
Details: In Egyptian mythology, Sobek was the crocodile-god who symbolized the fertility of the Nile River. He was also the god of pharaohs and leaders and so was viewed as immensely powerful.
Set
God of Storms, possible father of Anubis, later became god of evil
Details : As the god of the desert, Set was associated with sandstorms, and desert caravans. Due to the extreme hostility of the desert environment, Set was viewed as immensely powerful, and was consequently regarded from time to time as the chief god. In art, Set was mostly depicted as a mysterious and unknown creature, referred to by Egyptologists as the Set animal, with a curved snout, square ears, forked tail, and canine body, or sometimes as a human with only the head of the Set animal. It has no complete resemblence to any known creature, although it does resemble a composite of an aardvark, and a jackal, both of which are desert creatures.
Taweret
Goddess of pregnant children and protector at childbirth
Tefnut
goddess of order, justice, time, Heaven and Hell and weather
Thoth
god of the moon, drawing, writing, geometry, wisdom, medicine, music, astronomy, and magic
Details : Thoth is the Egyptian God of the moon and Wisdom. He is credited in ancient egyptian mythology as the creator of writing and the scribe of the gods.
Wepwawet
a wolf deity, worshipped in Lycopolis.