God Tatenen

God Tatenen
God Tatenen an ancient earth deity been the primeval pile, Tenen was the symbol for the rich Nile silt that emerged when the river receded after the flood. His name means illustrious Earth. He is presented as a man with 2 plumes and rams horns on his head. Sometimes his skin is painted green, representing his connection with flora. Originating in Memphis, Tenen was soon related with Ptah in his manifestation as a  creator deity.

God Sia

God Sia, one of ancient Egyptian gods, was the deification of percept in the Heliopolitan Ennead cosmogeny and is probably equivalent to the intellectual energies of the heart of Ptah in the Memphite cosmogeny. He also had a connexion with writing and was oftentimes shown in anthropomorphic form holding a papyrus scroll. This papyrus was opinion to embody intellectual achievements. It was said that Atum created the two deities Sia and Hu from his blood spilled while cutting his own penis, a possible reference to circumcision.

Sia appeared regular on the Solar barge during its journey over the night in New Kingdom Hades texts and tomb decorations, together with Hu, the "creative utterance," and Heka, the deity of magic. These deities were seen as some powers assisting the creator, and although deity Heka had his individual cult Sia did not.

God Geb

God Geb
God Geb was one of the key gods of the Ennead, a family of nine deities revered in the city of Heliopolis start in the Early Dynastic Period. According to the Creation myth of this city, Geb's father, Shu, set out Geb from Geb's lover and sister, Nut, the goddess of the sky, and increased her up from his reposing body to form the spheres. In some versions of the myth, Geb's pain over this separation did him to fall on his face and weep profusely, thereby creating the oceans; the flat of his back as he lay prone grown  land.  Prior  to  their  separation, though, Geb and Nut made 2 sons and  2  daughters,  all  of  whom  were divinities: Osiris, Seth, Nephthys, and Isis.

As the father of god Osiris, the Egyptian God of the dead, Geb was finally knew  throughout  Egypt  as  a  major deity  and  grown  the  taken  of  other myths, one of which supplied the model for royal succession. Geb was said to have held the throne in the divine realm for a time and then went his rule on to his  son  Osiris,  just  as  human  kings gone their crowns on to their sons. Because  of  his  position,  many  kings  of Egypt strongly named with Geb, and in some times and places Egypt's kings were said to be Gebs heirs. Maybe for this reason, Geb was near always showed as having a human form, although in a few works of art he is shown with a goose atop his head. The goose was a source  to  a  myth  in  which  Geb addressed the Great Cackler made a cosmic egg that made the sun.

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