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Egyptian Mythology Bast
In Egyptian mythology, Bast (also spelt Bastet, Ubasti, and Pasht) is an
ancient goddess, worshipped at least since the Second Dynasty. The centre of her
cult was in Per-Bast (Bubastis in Greek), which was named after her. Originally
she was viewed as the protector goddess of Lower Egypt, and consequently
depicted as a fierce lion. Indeed, her name means (female) devourer. As
protectress, she was seen as defender of the pharaoh, and consequently of the
chief god, Ra, who was a solar deity, gaining her the titles Lady of Flame and
Eye of Ra. Bast was originally a goddess of the sun, but later changed by the
Greeks to a goddess of the moon. In Greek mythology, Bast is also known as
Aelurus.
Later scribes sometimes named her Bastet, a variation on Bast consisting of an
additional feminine suffix to the one already present, thought to have been
added to emphasise pronunciation. Since Bastet would literally mean (female) of
the ointment jar, Bast gradually became thought of as the goddess of perfumes,
earning the title perfumed protector. In connection with this, when Anubis
became the god of embalming, Bast, as goddess of ointment, came to be regarded
as his mother, although this association was broken in later years, when Anubis
became Nephthys' son.

Bast as a lioness This gentler characteristic, of Bast as goddess of perfumes,
together with Lower Egypt's loss in the wars between Upper & Lower Egypt, led to
a decrease in her ferocity. Thus, by the Middle Kingdom she was generally
regarded as a domestic cat rather than a lionness. Occasionally, however, she
was depicted holding a lionness mask, which hinted at suppressed ferocity.
Because domestic cats tend to be tender and protective toward their offspring,
Bast was also regarded as a good mother, and she was sometimes depicted with
numerous kittens. Consequently, a woman who wanted children sometimes wore an
amulet showing the goddess with kittens, the number of which indicated her own
desired number of children.
Due to the severe disaster to the food supply that could be caused by simple
vermin such as mice and rats, and their ability to fight and kill snakes,
especially cobras, cats in Egypt were revered heavily, sometimes being given
golden jewelry to wear, and being allowed to eat from the same plates as their
owners. Consequently, as the main cat (rather than lion) deity, Bast was
strongly revered as the patron of cats, and thus it was in the temple at Per-Bast
that dead (and mummified) cats were brought for burial. Over 300,000 mummified
cats were discovered when Bast's temple at Per-Bast was excavated.
Bast as a domestic catAs a cat/lion goddess, and protector of the lands, when,
during the New Kingdom, the fierce lion god Maahes became part of Egyptian
mythology, she was identified, in the Lower Kingdom, as his mother. This
paralleled the identification of the fierce lion goddess Sekhmet, as his mother
in the Upper Kingdom.
As divine mother, and more especially as protectress, for Lower Egypt, she
became strongly associated with Wadjet, the patron goddess of Lower Egypt,
eventually becoming Wadjet-Bast, paralleling the similar pair of patron (Nekhbet)
and lioness protector (Sekhmet) for Upper Egypt. Eventually, her position as
patron and protector of Lower Egypt, lead to her being identified as the more
substantial goddess Mut, whose cult had risen to power with that of Amun, and
eventually being absorbed into her as Mut-Wadjet-Bast. Shortly after, Mut also
absorbed the identities of the Sekhmet-Nekhbet pairing as well.
This merging of identities of similar goddesses has lead to considerable
confusion, leading to some associating things such as the title Mistress of the
Sistrum (more properly belonging to Hathor, who had become thought of as an
aspect of Isis, as had Mut), and the idea of her as a lunar goddess (more
properly an attribute of Mut). Indeed, much of this confusion occurred to
subsequent generations, as the identities slowly merged, leading to the Greeks,
who sometimes named her Ailuros (Greek for cat), thinking of Bast as a version
of Artemis, their own moon goddess. And thus, to fit their own cosmology, to the
Greeks, Bast was thought of as the sister of Horus, who they identified as
Apollo (Artemis' brother), and consequently the daughter of Isis and Osiris.
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