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Horus god of the Ancient Egyptian
Horus is an ancient god of the Ancient Egyptian religion, whose cult survived
so long that he evolved dramatically over time and gained many names. The most
well known name is the Greek Horus, representing the Egyptian Heru/Har, which is
the basic element in most of the other names of Horus. Horus was so important
that the Eye of Horus became an important Egyptian symbol of power. He had a
man's body and a falcon's head. He only had one eye because after Osiris was
murdered by his brother Set, Horus fought with Set for the throne of Egypt. In
this battle Horus lost one of his eyes and later this became a sign of
protection in Egypt. In one story he has said to have cut off his mother's head.
Horus united Egypt and bestowed divinity on the pharaoh.
Horus, (Louvre Museum), 'Shen rings' in his grasp.Since he was god of the sky,
Horus became depicted as a falcon, or as a falcon-headed man, leading to Horus'
name, (in Egyptian, Heru), which meant The distant one. Horus was also sometimes
known as Nekheny (meaning falcon), although it has been proposed that Nekheny
may have been another falcon-god, worshipped at Nekhen (city of the hawk), that
became identified as Horus very early on. In this form, he was sometimes given
the title Kemwer, meaning (the) great black (one).
As Horus was the son of Osiris, and god of the sky, he became closely associated
with the Pharaoh of Upper Egypt (where Horus was worshipped), and became their
patron. The association with the Pharaoh brought with it the idea that he was
the son of Isis, in her original form, who was regarded as a deification of the
Queen.
It was said that after the world was created, Horus landed on a perch, known as
the djeba, which literally translates as finger, in order to rest, which
consequently became considered sacred. On some occasions, Horus was referred to
as lord of the djeba (i.e. lord of the perch or lord of the finger), a form in
which he was especially worshipped at Buto, known as Djebauti, meaning (ones) of
the djeba (the reason for the plural is not understood, and may just have been a
result of Epenthesis, or Paragoge). The form of Djebauti eventually became
depicted as an heron, nevertheless continuing to rest on the sacred perch.
Sun god
Since Horus was said to be the sky, it was natural that he was rapidly
considered to also contain the sun and moon. It became said that the sun was one
of his eyes and the moon the other, and that they traversed the sky when he, a
falcon, flew across it. Thus he became known as Harmerty - Horus of two eyes.
Later, the reason that the moon was not as bright as the sun was explained by a
tale, known as the contestings of Horus and Set, originating as a metaphor for
the conquest of Lower Egypt by Upper Egypt in about 3000BC. In this tale, it was
said that Set, the patron of Lower Egypt, and Horus, the patron of Upper Egypt,
had battled for Egypt brutally, with neither side victorious, until eventually
the gods sided with Horus.
As Horus was the ultimate victor he became known as Harsiesis, Heru-ur or
Har-Wer (ḥr.w wr 'Horus the Great'), but more usually translated as Horus the
Elder. In the struggle Set had lost a testicle, explaining why the desert, which
Set represented, is infertile. Horus' left eye had also been gouged out, which
explained why the moon, which it represented, was so weak compared to the sun.
It was also said that during a new-moon, Horus had become blinded and was titled
Mekhenty-er-irty (mḫnty r ỉr.ty 'He who has no eyes'), while when the moon
became visible again, he was re-titled Khenty-irty (ḫnty r ỉr.ty 'He who has
eyes'). While blind, it was considered that Horus was quite dangerous, sometimes
attacking his friends after mistaking them for enemies.
Ultimately, as another sun god, Horus became identified with Ra as Ra-Herakhty,
literally Ra, who is Horus of the two horizons. However, this identification
proved to be awkward, for it made Ra the son of Hathor, and therefore a created
being rather than the creator. And, even worse, it made Ra into Horus, who was
the son of Ra, i.e. it made Ra his own son and father, in a standard
sexually-reproductive manner, an idea that would not be considered
comprehensible until the Hellenic era. Consequently Ra and Horus never
completely merged into a single falcon-headed sun god.
Nevertheless the idea of making the identification persisted, and Ra continued
to be depicted as falcon-headed. Likewise, as Ra-Herakhty, in an allusion to the
Ogdoad creation myth, Horus was occasionally shown in art as a naked boy, with a
finger in his mouth, sitting on a lotus with his mother. In the form of a youth,
Horus was referred to as Neferhor. This is also spelled Nefer Hor, Nephoros or
Nopheros (nfr ḥr.w) meaning 'The Good Horus'.
In an attempt to resolve the conflict, Ra-Herakhty was occasionally said to be
married to Iusaaset, which was technically his own shadow, having previously
been Atum's shadow, before Atum was identified as Ra, in the form Atum-Ra, and
thus of Ra-Herakhty when Ra was also identified as a form of Horus. In the
version of the Ogdoad creation myth used by the Thoth cult, Thoth created Ra-Herakhty,
via an egg, and so was said to be the father of Neferhor.
Conqueror of Set
By the Nineteenth dynasty, the previous brief enmity between Set and Horus, in
which Horus had ripped off one of Set's testicles, was revitalised as a separate
tale. According to Papyrus Chester-Beatty I, Set was considered to have been
homosexual and is depicted as trying to prove his dominance by seducing Horus
and then having intercourse with him. However, Horus places his hand between his
thighs and catches Set's semen, then subsequently threw it in the river, so that
he may not be said to have been inseminated by Set. Horus then deliberately
spreads his own semen on some lettuce, which was Set's favourite food (the
Egyptians thought that lettuce was phallic). After Set has eaten the lettuce,
they go to the gods to try to settle the argument over the rule of Egypt. The
gods first listen to Set's claim of dominance over Horus, and call his semen
forth, but it answers from the river, invalidating his claim. Then, the gods
listen to Horus' claim of having dominated Set, and call his semen forth, and it
answers from inside Set. In consequence, Horus is declared the ruler of Egypt.
This myth, along with others, could be seen as an explanation of how the two
kingdoms of Egypt (Upper and Lower) came to be united. Horus was seen as the God
of Upper Egypt, and Set as the God of Lower Egypt. In this myth, the respective
Upper and Lower deities have a fight, through which Horus is the victor.
However, some of Horus (representing Upper Egypt) enters into Set (Lower Egypt)
thus explaining why Upper Egypt is dominant over the Lower Egyptians.
Brother of Isis
When Ra assimilated Atum into Atum-Ra, Horus became considered part of what had
been the Ennead. Since Atum had had no wife, having produced his children by
masturbating de facto (the concept of masturbation being offensive in Egypt-
Atum's hand being considered a female part[citation needed]), Hathor was easily
inserted as the mother of the previously motherless subsequent generation of
children. However, Horus did not fit in so easily, since if he was identified as
the son of Hathor and Atum-Ra, in the Ennead, he would then be the brother of
the primordial air and moisture, and the uncle of the sky and earth, between
which there was initially nothing, which was not very consistent with him being
the sun. Instead, he was made the brother of Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys, as
this was the only plausible level at which he could meaningfully rule over the
sun, and over the Pharaoh's kingdom. It was in this form that he was worshipped
at Behdet as Har-Behedti (also abbreviated Bebti).
Since Horus had become more and more identified with the sun, since his
identification as Ra, his identification as also the moon suffered, so it was
possible for the rise of other moon gods, without complicating the system of
belief too much. Consequently, Chons became the moon god. Thoth, who had also
been the moon god, became much more associated with secondary mythological
aspects of the moon, such as wisdom, healing, and peace making. When the cult of
Thoth arose in power, Thoth was retroactively inserted into the earlier myths,
making Thoth the one whose magic caused Set and Horus' semen to respond, in the
tale of the contestings of Set and Horus, for example.
Thoth's priests went on to explain how it was that there were 5 children of Geb
and Nut. They said that Thoth had prophesied the birth of a great king of the
gods, and so Ra, afraid of being usurped, had cursed Nut with not being able to
give birth at any point in the year. In order to remove this curse, Thoth
proceeded to gamble with Chons, winning 1/72nd of moonlight from him. Prior to
this time in Egyptian history, the calendar had had 360 days, and so 1/72 of
moonlight each day corresponded to 5 extra days, and so the tale states that Nut
was able to give birth on each of these extra days, having 5 children. The
Egyptian calendar was reformed around this time, and gained the 5 extra days,
which, by coincidence, meant that this could be used to explain the 5 children
of Nut.
Mystery religion
Since Horus, as the son of Osiris, was only in existence after Osiris's death,
and because Horus, in his earlier guise, was the husband of Isis, the difference
between Horus and Osiris blurred, and so, after a few centuries, it came to be
said that Horus was the resurrected form of Osiris. Likewise, as the form of
Horus before his death and resurrection, Osiris, who had already become
considered a form of creator when belief about Osiris assimilated that about
Ptah-Seker, also became considered to be the only creator, since Horus had
gained these aspects of Ra.
Eventually, in the Hellenic period, Horus was, in some locations, identified
completely as Osiris, and became his own Father, since this concept was not so
disturbing to Greek philosophy as it had been to that of ancient Egypt. In this
form, Horus was sometimes known as Heru-sema-tawy (ḥr.w smȝ tȝ.wy 'Horus, Uniter
of Two Lands'), since Osiris ruled over the land of the dead, and Horus, that of
the living.
By assimilating Hathor, who had herself assimilated Bata, who was associated
with music, and in particular the sistrum, Isis was likewise thought of in some
areas in the same manner. This particularly happened amongst the groups who
thought of Horus as his own father, and so Horus, in the form of the son,
amongst these groups often became known as Ihy (alternately: Ihi, Ehi, Ahi, Ihu),
meaning "sistrum player", which allowed the confusion between the father and son
to be side-stepped.
The combination of this, now rather esoteric mythology, with the philosophy of
Plato, which was becoming popular on the Mediterranean shores, lead to the tale
becoming the bases of a mystery religion. Many Greeks, and those of other
nations, who encountered the faith, thought it so profound that they sought to
create their own, modelled upon it, but using their own gods. This led to the
creation of what was effectively one religion, which was, in many places,
adjusted to superficially reflect the local mythology although it substantially
adjusted them. The religion is known to modern scholars as that of Osiris-Dionysus.
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