Goddess Wosret


Goddess Wosret was the Goddess of Thebes  whose name  means  the  powerful.  Perchance she was  the  earliest  consort of God Amun at Karnak, leading Mut. Certainly Middle Kingdom  pharaohs  of Theban  origins take her name as an factor in their own Sen-Wosret or man belonging to Wosret.

Goddess Tefnut


Goddess Tefnut name
Goddess Tefnut
Goddess Tefnut was an ancient Egyptian goddess, observed as the twin sister and consort of God Shu. Earlier she was the accord of a god named Tefen, but his cult disappeared. As Tefens wife, she was called Tefent. Tefnut embodied moisture, rain, and fluency and also had a set in solar fads. She was affiliated with Ptah at Heliopolis. Tefnut served as a substance by which Ptah brought life into the world.

In historical stops, Tefnut was associated with the goddess Maat and was the place between heaven and earth. With Maat, Tefnut was sometimes viewed as a spiritual draw rather than a divine being.  She was represented as a lioness or as a woman with a lions  head. Tefnut supported  the sky with Shu and  received  the newly risen sun every morning.

Goddess Iat

Goddess Iat name

Goddess Iat was an Egyptian minor goddess of milk and, by connection, of raising and childbirth. The name of the goddess resembles iatet which is Egyptian word for "milk". The goddess is rarely mentioned in ancient Egyptian texts, and that's why very microscopic is known about her. Some mentioning of Iat can be discovered in the Pyramid Texts like where a king is reading "my foster-mother is Iat, and it is she who sustains me, it is indeed she who bore me"

Goddess Iusaaset


Goddess Iusaaset
Goddess Iusaaset was a goddess of Egypt, sometimes worshipped as Nebhethotep, she was a fit of the god Tem, depicted in some periods as the sole raise of the gods Shu and Tefnut. Described as a woman holding a scepter and an ankh, she is established wearing a vulture headdress and a horned disk. Iusas was a female aspect of Tem.

Goddess Hedetet


Goddess Hedetet name
Goddess Hedetet is a scorpion goddess of the ancient Egyptian faith. She resembles Serket in some ways, but was in later periods agreed into Isis. She was described with the head of a scorpion, nursing a baby. She is observed in the Book of the Dead.

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