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  2. Nut (goddess) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nut_(goddess)

    Ra, the sun god, was the second to rule the world, according to the reign of the gods. He decreed, "Nut shall not give birth any day of the year." At that time, the year was only 360 days. Nut spoke to Thoth, god of wisdom, and he had a plan. Thoth gambled with Khonsu, god of the Moon, whose light rivaled that of Ra's. Every time Khonsu lost ...

  3. Unut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unut

    Cartouche of pharaoh Unas with the hare of the goddess Unut. Her name can be represented with five different hieroglyphs, but she rarely appears in literature and inscriptions. Her name was taken into the highest royal position just once in the long Egyptian history. Her male companion is Wenenu, who was sometimes regarded as a form of Osiris ...

  4. Hathor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hathor

    Once pacified, the goddess returns to become the consort of the sun god or of the god who brings her back. [29] The two aspects of the Eye goddess—violent and dangerous versus beautiful and joyful—reflected the Egyptian belief that women, as the Egyptologist Carolyn Graves-Brown puts it, "encompassed both extreme passions of fury and love".

  5. Ancient Egyptian deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian_deities

    Many other names have no certain meaning, even when the gods who bear them are closely tied to a single role. The names of the sky goddess Nut and the earth god Geb do not resemble the Egyptian terms for sky and earth. [79] Facsimile of a vignette from the Papyrus of Ani, depicting Seker-Osiris standing in a shrine.

  6. Neith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neith

    Plutarch described the statue of a seated and veiled goddess in the Egyptian city of Sais. [ 45 ] [ 46 ] He identified the goddess as "Athena, whom [the Egyptians] consider to be Isis." [ 45 ] However, Sais was the cult center of the goddess Neith, whom the Greeks compared to their goddess Athena , and could have been the goddess that Plutarch ...

  7. Khufu Statuette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khufu_Statuette

    The Khufu Statuette or the Ivory figurine of Khufu is an ancient Egyptian statue. Historically and archaeologically significant, it was found in 1903 by Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie during excavation of Kom el-Sultan in Abydos, Egypt.

  8. Archaeologists in Egypt unearth section of large Ramses II statue

    www.aol.com/news/archaeologists-egypt-unearth...

    The limestone block is about 3.8 metres (12.5 feet) high and depicts a seated Ramses wearing a double crown and a headdress topped with a royal cobra, Bassem Jihad, head of the mission's Egyptian ...

  9. Bes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bes

    Bes appears in the video game Realm of the Mad God (2011) as a boss of an Egyptian themed dungeon known as the "Tomb of the Ancients", alongside Nut and Geb. Bes appears in “the Nikopol Trilogy” (1980-1992), by Enki Bilal, alongside several of the ancient gods of Egypt, hovering over a dystopian Paris and world.