Egyptian Gods and Goddesses Index


Human and semihuman forms of some of the chief Egyptian deities: 1) Horus, son of Osiris, a sky god closely connected with the king. 2) Set, enemy of Horus and Osiris, god of storms and disorder. 3) Thoth, a moon deity and god of writing, counting and wisdom. 4) Khnum, a ram god who shapes men and their kas on his potter's wheel. 5) Hathor, goddess of love birth and death. 6) Sobek, the crocodile god, Lord of the Faiyum. 7) Ra, the sun god in his many forms. 8) Amon, a creator god often linked with Ra. 9) Ptah, another creator god and the patron of craftsmen. 1O) Anubis, god of mummification. 11) Osiris, god of agriculture and ruler of the dead. 12) Isis, wife of Osiris, mother of Horus and Mistress of Magic.


When you study the mythologies of ancient civilizations, you realize they are all designed by the same geometric blueprint that follows into humanity's current timeline. In the physical we find duality on all levels, especially in the pantheons of creational forces linked to one another. We further find the pattern of creation and destruction ... repeating in the cycles of time ... embracing the human experience. Designing the gods and goddesses falls into the same categories of duality - good and bad - light and dark - forever seeking balance and the return to full consciousness.

Always we find Gods who came from the sky (higher frequency) and those that came from the sea of creation (collective unconsciousness). Their creation myths speak to us about a beginning and an end for Earth, giving rise to something greater. We are reaching the end of the current programmed experience. Reality is a holographic projection seen through the eye of consciousness in time. The eye is a metaphor for the place of creation through which all things emerge as consciousness and are experienced and archived as it moves to the next.

The Egyptian Pantheons of major and minor gods and goddesses follow the pattern along with animal representations that link to destruction and rebirth - birds, cats, aquatic beings who create or destroy. In truth, one soul played the roles of all the gods. That souls also played the god roles in all of the ancient civilizations as told in their creation myths.

Who they are and what they symbolize are all part of the myth, math, metaphor and magic of realities.


Zep Tepi
Ogdoad
Ennead


Aken
Aker
Ammit, Ammut
Amun
Amunet
Anat
Andjety
Anhur
Anubis
Ash
Astarte
Aten
Atum & Auf (Efu Ra)
Ba, Baal
Babi
Bast
Bes
Daumutef
Geb
Hapi
Hathor
Heket
Horus
Imhotep
Isis
Kek, Kuk, Kauket
Khepri
Khnum
Maahes
Ma'at
Mafdet
Mandulis
Mehen
Menhit
Meretseger
Meskhenet
Min
Monthu
Mut
Nefertem
Nehebkau
Neith
Nekhebet
Nephthys
Nu, Naunet
Nut
Osiris
Pakhet
Ptah
Ra
Sekhmet
Seshat
Seth
Shezmu
Shu
Sobek
Tatenen
Tauret
Tefnut
Thoth
Tree Goddesses
Wadjet
Wepwawet


Other References:
Egyptian Gods  Wikipedia
Egyptian Goodesses  Wikipedia
Egyptian Gods and Goodesses  Egypt Tour




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