|

|
Appearance:
- Man
with a ram-head
- A ram
- Man
wearing an ostrich plumed hat
Amun was
one of the most powerful gods in ancient Egypt.
At the
height of Egyptian civilization he was called the 'King of the Gods'.
Amun was
important throughout the history of ancient Egypt. However, when
Amun was combined with the sun god Ra he was even more powerful. He
was then called Amun-Ra.
A large and
important temple was built at Thebes to honour Amun.
|
Amun

 |
|
|
Appearance:
-
Man with a jackal
head
- A jackal
Anubis was the god
of embalming and the dead.
Since jackals were
often seen in cemeteries, the ancient Egyptians believed that Anubis
watched over the dead.
Anubis was the god
who helped to embalm Osiris after he was killed by Seth. Thus,
Anubis was the god who watched over the process of mummifying people
when they died.
Priests often wore a mask of Anubis during
mummification ceremonies.
|
Anubis


|
| |
|
|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with the
double crown
Atum was a creator
god.
The ancient
Egyptians believed that Atum was the first god to exist on earth.
The ancient Egyptians believed that Atum rose
from the waters of chaos (Nun) and created all the gods.
|
Atum
'The All' or 'Perfection'


|
|
 |
Appearance:
- A sun disk with
rays which end in hands
Aten was a form of
the sun god Ra.
During the reign of Akhenaten, the Aten was
made the 'king' of the gods.
|
Aten


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with the
head of a cat
Bastet was a
protective goddess.
Bastet was usually
seen as a gentle protective goddess. However, she sometimes appeared
with the head of a lioness to protect the king in battle.
The cat was a
symbol of Bastet. The ancient Egyptians made many statues of cats
like this one to honour Bastet.
Bastet was one of the daughters of the sun
god, Ra. A great temple was built in her honour at Bubastis in the
Delta.
|
Bastet


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Dwarf with lion
and human features
- Dwarf wearing the
skin of a lion
Bes was the
protector of pregnant women, newborn babies and the family.
The ancient
Egyptians also believed that Bes protected against snake and
scorpion bites.
Amulets of Bes
were popular at all levels of Egyptian society.
|
Bes


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with a pot
belly, shown with water plants
Hapy was the god
of the innundation.
Hapy was
especially important to the ancient Egyptians because he brought the
flood every year.
The flood deposited rich silt on the banks of
the Nile, allowing the Egyptians to grow crops.
|
Hapy


|
|
|
Appearance:
- Man lying down
below the arch of the sky
goddess Nut
-
Man with a goose
on his head
Geb was the god of
the earth.
Geb was the
husband and brother of the sky goddess Nut. He was also the father
of Osiris, Isis, Nepthys and Seth.
When Seth and
Horus fought for the throne of Egypt, Geb made Horus the ruler of
the living.
The ancient Egyptians believed that
earthquakes were Geb's laughter.
|
Geb


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with the
ears of a cow
- A cow
-
Woman with a
headdress of horns and a
sun disk
Hathor was a
protective goddess. She was also the goddess of love and joy.
Hathor was the
wife of Horus, and was sometimes thought of as the mother of the
pharaoh.
Hathor was
connected with foreign places and materials. For instance, Hathor
was the goddess of the desert and the turquoise mines in the Sinai.
A large temple was
built to honour Hathor at Dendera.
|
Hathor
'House of Horus'


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a hawk
- hawk
Horus was a god of
the sky.
He is probably
most well-known as the protector of the ruler of Egypt.
The Egyptians
believed that the pharaoh was the 'living Horus'.
The ancient
Egyptians had many different beliefs about the god Horus. One of the
most common beliefs was that Horus was the son of Isis and Osiris.
After Osiris was
murdered by his brother Seth, Horus fought with Seth for the throne
of Egypt.
In this battle,
Horus lost one of his eyes. The eye was restored to him and it
became a symbol of protection for the ancient Egyptians. After this
battle, Horus was chosen to be the ruler of the world of the living.
One of the best-preserved temples in Egypt
today was dedicated to Horus. It is located in Upper Egypt at a town
called Edfu.
|
Horus
'The One Far Above'

 |
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with
headdress in the shape of a throne
-
A pair of cow
horns with a sun disk
Isis was a
protective goddess. She used powerful magic spells to help people in
need.
Isis was the wife
of Osiris and the mother of Horus.
Since each pharaoh
was considered the 'living Horus', Isis was very important.
Isis is often
shown holding Horus on her lap. Isis is associated with thrones
because her lap was the first 'throne' that Horus sat upon.
This amulet is
called the 'Isis knot' and is a symbol of protection.
A temple was built
to honour Isis at Philae. It is still standing today.
|
Isis


|
|
 |
Appearance:
- Man carrying a
bark
According to an
ancient Egyptian creation myth, Nun was the waters of chaos.
Nun was the only
thing that existed on Earth before there was land. Then, the first
land (in the form of a mound) rose out of Nun.
Nun was also associated with the chaos that
existed at the edges of the universe.
|
Nun


|
|
 |
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a scarab
- A scarab beetle
Khepri was a god
of creation, the movement of the sun, and rebirth.
The scarab beetle
lays its eggs in a ball of dung. Then, it rolls the ball along the
ground until the young beetles are ready to hatch.
When the young
beetles are ready, they crawl out of the ball.
The ancient
Egyptians believed that the beetles just appeared from nowhere- as
they believed that their creator god had appeared from nowhere.
Thus, they thought that the scarab beetle was special.
In certain
creation stories, Khepri is connected with the god Atum. He is also
connected with the sun god Ra who pushed the sun through the sky
every day.
|
Khepri
'He Who is Coming
into Being'

 |
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a curly-horned ram
Khnum was a
creator god, and a god of the innundation.
Khnum was a creator-god, moulding people on a
potter's wheel. Since potters used Nile mud, Khnum was also
connected with the innundation.
|
Khnum


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with a
feather on her head
- A feather
Ma'at was the
goddess of truth, justice and harmony. She was associated with the
balance of things on earth.
Ma'at was the
daughter of the sun god Ra.
Pharaohs are
frequently shown in wall reliefs making an offering of Ma'at to the
gods-showing that they are preserving harmony and justice on earth.
The vizier who was in charge of the law courts
was known as the 'priest of Ma'at'.
|
Ma'at


|
| |
Appearance:
- Woman whose body
arches across the sky, wearing a
dress decorated with stars.
Nut was the
sky-goddess, whose body created a vault or canopy over the earth.
Nut was the
sister/wife of Geb, the god of the earth. She was also the mother of
Isis, Osiris, Nepthys and Seth.
The ancient
Egyptians believed that at the end of the day, Nut swallowed the
sun-god, Ra, and gave birth to him again the next morning.
|
Nut


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with
headdress showing her name in hieroglyphs
Nephthys was a
protective goddess of the dead.
Nephthys was the
sister of Isis and Osiris, and the sister/wife of Seth. Nephthys was
also the mother of Anubis.
She is often shown on coffins, or in funerary
scenes.
|
Nephtys
'Lady of the
Mansion'

 |
|

|
Appearance:
- A mummified man
wearing a white cone-like headdress with feathers
Osiris was the god
of the dead, and ruler of the underworld.
Osiris was the
brother/husband of Isis, and the brother of Nepthys and Seth. He was
also the father of Horus.
As well as being a
god of the dead, Osiris was a god of resurrection and fertility. In
fact, the ancient Egyptians believed that Osiris gave them the gift
of barley, one of their most important crops.
A large temple was built to honour Osiris at
Abydos.
|
Osiris


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a hawk, with a sun disk headdress
Ra-Horakhty was a
combination of the gods Horus and Ra.
Horus was a god of
the sky, and Ra was the god of the sun. Thus, Ra-Horakhty was
thought of as the god of the rising sun.
|
Ra-Horakhty
'Horus in the Horizon'


|
| |
Appearance:
- Man wearing a
headdress with feathers
- A lion
Shu was the god of
the air.
Shu held up the
figure of Nut so that the earth and the sky were separated.
|
Shu
'He Who Rises Up'


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with hawk
head and headdress with a sun disk
Ra was the sun
god. He was the most important god of the ancient Egyptians.
The ancient
Egyptians believed that Ra was swallowed every night by the sky
goddess Nut, and was reborn every morning.
The ancient
Egyptians also believed that he travelled through the underworld at
night.
In the underworld,
Ra appeared as a man with the head of a ram.
|
Ra
'Sun'


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man wrapped in a
tight white cloak carrying a staff
Ptah was the god
of craftsmen.
In one creation myth Ptah was a creator god.
He spoke the words and the world came into being.
|
Ptah


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Woman with the
head of a lioness
Sekhmet was the
goddess of war.
|
Sekhmet
'The Powerful One'


|
| |
Appearance:
- Woman wearing a
panther skin dress and a star headdress
Seshat was the
goddess of writing and measurement.
|
Seshat


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a 'Seth animal' (unidentifiable)
Seth was the god
of chaos.
Seth represented
everything that threatened harmony in Egypt.
He was the brother
of Osiris and Isis, as well as the brother/husband of Nepthys.
He murdered his
brother Osiris, then battled with his nephew Horus to be the ruler
of the living.
At certain times in the history of ancient
Egypt, Seth was associated with royalty.
|
Seth


|
|
 |
Appearance:
- Man with the
head of a crocodile and a headdress of feathers and a sun-disk
Sobek was a Nile
god.
Sobek was connected with the Nile, and
protected the king. Live crocodiles were kept in pools at temples
built to honour Sobek.
|
Sobek


|
|

|
Appearance:
- Head of a
hippopotamus with the arms and legs of a lion, the back and tail of
a crocodile, and the breasts and stomach of a pregnant woman.
Tawaret was a
goddess who protected women during pregnancy and childbirth.
Many of the gods
and goddesses in ancient Egypt had temples built to honour them.
Other gods and
goddesses like Tawaret and Bes were worshipped by people in their
own homes.
This is an amulet of the goddess Tawaret.
People often wore amulets like this, or kept them in their homes.
|
Tawaret
'The Great One'


|
| |
Appearance:
-
Woman with the
head of a lioness
Tefnut was the
goddess of moisture.
She was the wife of Shu and the mother of Nut
(the sky) and Geb (the earth).
|
Tefnut


|
|
 |
Appearance:
- A man with the
head of an ibis holding a
writing palette
- An ibis
- A baboon
Thoth was the god
of writing and knowledge.
The ancient
Egyptians believed that Thoth gave them the gift of hieroglyphic
writing.
Thoth was also connected with the moon.
|
Thot


|
| |
|
|