Goddess Sekhmet

Goddess Sekhmet name

Goddess Sekhmet
Goddess Sekhmet was a powerful war goddess of Egypt, the uprooter of pharaohs enemies, called "She Who Is Powerful". Sekhmet was a lioness  deity, the check of Ptah and the mother of Nefertum and Imhotep in Memphis A daughter of the God Ra, Sekhmet struck at evildoers and broken plagues. She also cured the righteous. Her clergymen were physicians and wizards.

Sekhmet had a modern role among the rulers of Egypt, as she was thought to bring about the innovation of the pharaohs. In the form  of a cobra she was called Mehen, and she possibly came from Nubia (modern Sudan) in the early eras. She  was  also visited the "eye of Ra".

Her statues normally depicted her as a woman with a lions lead, and at sentences she wore a sun disk on her point. In this form she was a warrior expression of the sun, getting flames to devour the oppositions of Egypt. In some eras, the gates of Sekhmet's temples were given as a signal of the onset of a military campaign. Amenemhat III (1844-1797 B.C.E.) admitted 700 statues of Sekhmet in his mortuary temple in Dashur. She  was also portrayed on the wall of the temple of Sahure (2458-2446 B.C.E.) at Abusir. This portrait acquired a widespread reputation for its weird cures.

Bubastis, The Loacation of Bastet's Cult

Bubastis (Tell-Basta-Egypt Delta)
Goddess Bastet was a local deity whose cult was centered in the city of Bubastis, now Tell Basta, which consisted the Delta near what  is  knew  as  Zagazig  today. The  town, knew in  Egyptian as (Per-Bast), carries her name, literally thinking "House of Bast". It was known in Greek as (Boubastis) and understood into Hebrew as P-beset. In the biblical Book of Ezekiel (30:17), the town looks in the Hebrew form Pibeseth

Goddess Bastet Festivals

Goddess Bastet holding a sistrum
Herodotus links that of the many solemn fetes held in Egypt, the most heavy and most popular one was that famous in Bubastis in honour of Bastet, whom he calls Bubastis and matches with the Greek goddess Artemis. Each year on the day of her festival, the town is said to have appealed some 700,000 visitors, both men and women (but not children), who came in many another crowded ships. The women engaged in music, song, and dance on their way to the place, great dedicates were made and significant amounts of wine were drunk, more  than was the case passim the year. This fits well with Egyptian sources which dictate that leonine goddesses are to be staid with the "feeds of drunkenness".

The goddess Bastet was sometimes drawn holding a ceremonial sistrum in one hand and an breastplate in the other the protection usually resembling a collar or gorget embellished with a lioness head.

Bastet was a lioness goddess of the sun throughout most of Ancient Egyptian history, but later when she was exchanged into a cat goddess (Bastet). She also was modified to a goddess of the moon by Greeks worrying Ancient Egypt toward the end of its civilisation. In Greek mythology, Bastet also is famous as Ailuros.

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