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Egyptian mythology, Greek mythology, Nordic mythology, Charlemagne Twelve Paladins

King Arthur:

Egyptian Mythology

Main Gods:

Amon: the main god.

Ra: God of the Sun.

Anubis: The tomb-guarding god who escorts souls to another world. He looks like a wolf with a human body.

Horus: The god of vengeance, the guardian of kingship, in the shape of an eagle.

Isis (Isis/Auset): Wife of Osiris, mother of Horus, mother of the earth, also in charge of life.

Nut: God of the sky.

Osiris: Pluto, also in charge of fertility.

Aton/Aten: the sun god of the dynasty.

Atum: The Sun God of Twilight.

Khons/Chons: The son of Amun and Mut, the moon god, and also in charge of medicine.

Hugh (Shu): God of air.

Min/Menu (Amsu): The patron saint of travelers, also in charge of production and harvest.

Mo (Month/Mentu, Men Thu): in charge of war, with the shape of an eagle head and a human body.

Mut (Mut/Golden Dawn, Auramooth): Amun’s wife, in charge of war, looks like a lion.

Thoth: God of wisdom.

Seth: God of Chaos.

Animal God:

Bast/Bastet: Cat God.

Edjo: Snake god, symbol and patron saint of Lower Egypt.

Heqet: Frog God.

Khepri: Scarab.

Khnum: Ram god.

Sati: God of elephants.

Sekhmet: the lioness god.

Selket: God of scorpions.

Sobek: God of crocodiles.

Other gods:

Anuket: God of water.

Apis: The god of fertility and production, shaped like a bull.

Bes: the god of music.

Geb (Seb): God of the Earth,

Harpocrates/Hor-pa-kraat; Golden Dawn, Hoor-par-kraat: The name of Horus as a child.

Hathor/Het-Heru, Het-Hert: The wife of Horus, the goddess of love and fertility.

Imhotep/Imouthis: patron saint of medicine and towers.

Maat: God of justice and order.

Neith (Neith/Net, Neit; Gold Dawn, Thoum-aesh-neith): God of wisdom and war.

Nekhbet: Protector of Upper Egypt.

Nephthys: Mother of Anubis, patron saint of the dead.

Ptah: God of creation.

Qetesh: God of love and beauty.

Seker: The god of light.

Tefnut: God of rain.

Four Sons of Horus: Guardians of Pluto's body.

Amset: One of the four sons of Horus, protector of the livers of the dead.

Hapi (Golden Dawn, Ahephi): one of the four sons of Horus, protector of the lungs of the dead.

Duamutef (Tuamutef; Golden Dawn, Thmoomathph): one of the four sons of Horus, protector of the stomachs of the dead.

Qebhsenuef: One of the four sons of Horus, protector of the intestines of the dead.

Ra (sometimes spelled Re or Rah, also called Atum) is the sun god of Heliopolis in ancient Egypt. Starting from the Fifth Dynasty, he was associated with The Theban god Amon combined to become the most important god in the Egyptian pantheon. For more than ten centuries, Ra remained the highest god in Egypt until Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) During the religious reform of the century), worship of gods other than Aton (that is, the sun god of the dynasty, whose image is a sun disk) was prohibited. Later, his worship was combined with Heryshaf in Together.

Ra is a self-created god. He was born from the original water (Mehturt, the mound created by the eight Ogdoad) or a lotus. He used his own semen or Secretions created Shu and Tefnut, penis blood created Hu and Sia, and tears created humans.

The sun is Ra's entire body, or just his eyes. In Heliopolis (the center of Ra worship), he was also represented as the sun god Aton and Atum, the god of the evening, came to worship. Ra was called Atum in the morning and Atum in the dusk. Later he merged with Horus.

Although Ra The same god as Atum ("the perfecter or perfecter"), who was used only on special occasions. He was primarily a symbol of the setting sun and a substitute for Ra as the creator of Hugh and Tefnut. .In some myths, Atum only refers to Atum created by the god Buta. Atum is the father of Hike.

Atum is one of the Enneads. The first one is often represented as the black bull Mnewer. He has the appearance of a snake, a lizard, a beetle, a lion, a bull and a bee.

The god Ra comes to Seth every night ) and Mehen (to guard against attacks by monsters such as Apep) traveled to the underworld by boat. During this journey, he used the name Auf Ra or Auf Ra The image of Efu Ra appeared.

Once, Hathor had a dispute with Ra, and she left Egypt in anger. Ra soon began to miss Hathor, but Hathor turned herself into She turned into a cat and attacked all gods and people who came close to her. Finally, under the persuasion of the god Tut, Hathor returned to Egypt.

The identity of Aemon-Ra is the same as that of Zeus Together with Jupiter, he was recognized by the Greeks and Romans. The Greeks even gave Thebes the name "Diospolis" (City of Zeus). Aemon-Ra sometimes has the image of a phoenix .

The symbol of Ra is a golden disk, or a circle with a dot in the middle.

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Hugh (Shu) is the wind god in Egyptian mythology and one of the nine pillar gods. He was created by Atum (Ra) from his own semen or secretions (mucus). He married his sister Tefnut and had Nut and Geb. He stood on his son Geb, the god of earth, and held up his daughter Nut, the god of sky, in his hands, separating them.

In art, Hugh is usually depicted as a man with ostrich feathers on his head.

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Tefnut is the god of rain, fertility, and nine-pillar god in Egyptian mythology. 1. She was created by Ra from her own semen or secretion (mucus). She married her brother Hugh and gave birth to Geb and Nut.

Once, Tefnut and Hugh There was a dispute, and she left Egypt in anger. Hugh soon began to miss Tefnut, but she turned into a cat and attacked all men and male gods who came near her. Finally, the god Tut finally convinced him in disguise She returns to Egypt. (This is very similar to the story of Ra and Hathor)

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Geb (also known as Geb Seb or Keb is the ancient Egyptian god of earth and fertility, the son of Hugh and Tefnut, and one of the Nine Pillars. This belief in ancient Egypt was different from other parts of the world. In other myths, the earth god often appears as a goddess. The image of Gebu is a goose-headed body with a green or black body. Geb imprisoned the souls of evil people, preventing them from entering heaven.

Geb married Nut and gave birth to Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys.

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Nut (Nut, also known as Nuit) is the god of the sky in Egyptian mythology. It is more common than other myths. A god who appears in male form, Nut is a goddess. Nut is the daughter of Hugh and Tefnut, one of the Nine Pillars.

The sun god Ra enters her mouth every night after sunset , and was reborn from her vulva the next morning. She also swallowed and regenerated the stars.

Nute was also the goddess of death, and she is depicted on the inner walls of most sarcophagus. The image of Nut. The pharaoh will enter her body after death and will be reborn soon.

In artistic works, the image of Nut is a naked woman supported by Hugh and covered with stars; Opposite her (sky) is her husband Geb (earth).

Nut married Geb and gave birth to Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys.

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Osiris (also known as Usiris) is the king of Hades in Egyptian mythology, one of the Nine Pillars, and an ancient One of the most important gods in Egypt. He was a god who was reborn repeatedly. He was eventually buried in the city of Abydos, where he was the patron saint.

Osiris was the god of the earth. The son of the god Geb and the sky god Nut. In Egypt, Osiris was the god in charge of the underworld, as well as the god of fertility and agriculture. He and his wife Isis gave birth to Horus. According to the Book of the Dead, his The eldest son was called Beb. Later, he was united with Sek and Buta to become [[Buta-Sek-Osiris], and was also equated with Heryshaf.

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Isis (Greek; Aset in Egyptian) is the ancient Egyptian god of motherhood and fertility. One of the gods. She is a repeatedly reborn god.

Originally, Isis was a goddess of imperial power (in hieroglyphics, her name includes the word "throne"). Later, during the Greek rule, she became the patron saint of sailors.

Isis was the daughter of Geb, the earth god, and Nut, the sky god. She married her brother Osiris and gave birth to Holland. Russ Osiris was murdered and dismembered by his brother Seth, and Isis later pieced Osiris's body back together and resurrected him (this associated the image of Isis with the underworld and funerary cults), and with him She gave birth to Horus in the wetlands of Kemnis. In addition to Horus, she was also the mother of Min (some said they were lovers).

Isis and her sisters Nephthys is both the patron saint of the dead. They often appear in human form at both ends of the coffin, spreading their wings to protect the deceased. Both sisters have magical powers.

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Seth (also known as Set, Setekh, etc.), in Egyptian mythology, was originally the god of strength, war, storms, deserts and outer lands. . He protects caravans in the desert, but at the same time attacks them with sandstorms. He is the son of Geb and Nut, the husband of Nephthys, and one of the Nine Pillars. His image is closely associated with the god Yash, the god of the Sahara Desert.

According to the Greek historian Herodotus, Seth was first worshiped by the Berbers. Some scholars believe that Seth is the Barbary sea god Poseidon.

A more common nickname for Set is "the great of strength". It is stated in one of the Pyramid Texts that the power of the king is the power of Seth.

When the sun god Ra traveled through the underworld at night, Set guarded him. Most notably, he fought and killed Apep, the evil serpent of darkness who attacked Ra every night.

Later, when Seth's brother Osiris became a much more important god, Seth came to be seen as his polar opposite.

Set became the god of evil because of a myth about Seth killing Osiris in a fight.

Set is often compared to Horus. Since Horus was a god of heaven, Seth was also regarded as the god of earth. The metal ore from the underground is called "Bone of Set". In the third millennium BC, Set replaced Horus as the patron saint of the pharaohs; but Horus was replaced again when the legend of Set's murder of his brothers spread.

The image of Seth is usually a jackal-headed god with rectangular ears and a long, curved and protruding mouth. Some believe it actually depicts a native pig, or another as-yet-unidentified beast. In addition to the animals mentioned above, Seth is sometimes depicted with the head of an antelope, donkey, crocodile or hippopotamus.

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Nephthys is the patron saint of the dead in Egyptian mythology and is also the god of fertility. She is one of the Nine Pillars. "Nephthys" is also the name given to the eldest woman in a family. She may have been a form of Bat or Neith.

In Egyptian art, her hair appears similar to the Shroud. She is depicted with a basket or a small house on her head, sometimes as a winged woman, and sometimes as a kite, falcon, falcon or other bird. She was the daughter of Geb and Nut and the wife of Seth. Begot Anubis with Seth. She often appears in art alongside her sister Isis.

Main Gods:

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Amon is the Hellenistic name of an Egyptian main god. The Egyptian transliteration is ?mn, meaning "the hidden one" (also spelled "Amon"). He is one of the eight Ogdoad, and his consort is Mut.

At first, he was only a local god in Thebes. At that time, Thebes was just an inconspicuous town on the east bank of the Nile, located in the area surrounding today's Karnak Temple. The Eleventh Dynasty originated from a family in the Hermonthite state (or possibly in Thebes itself) who decorated their temples with statues. Amun's name was compounded into Amenemhat, the name of the founder of the Twelfth Dynasty. The name was inherited by his three heirs. Several kings of the Middle Kingdom also adopted the same name; the Seventeenth Dynasty of Thebes drove out the Hyksos, and Amun was re-prominent as a god of the royal city.

However, it was not until the rulers of the Eighteenth Dynasty marched their victorious armies to the borders from all directions that Amun began to become the universally recognized god in Egypt, crowding out other Egyptian gods. , even walked out of Egypt and became the god of the universe. The pharaohs attributed all their victories to Amon, and spent wealth and labor on Amon's temple.

Amon is depicted in human form, He wears a headband with two parallel feathers sticking straight out from the headband. This may symbolize the tail feathers of an eagle. There are two common images of Eamon: one is sitting on the throne, and the other is standing. Holding a whip, he resembles the god Min of Coptos and Chemmis (Akhmim). The latter may be his original image, the god of fertility. In his presence the king ceremoniously tills the land to be sown or harvests the ripe grains. His consort is sometimes called Amaunet (the feminine form of Amun), but more commonly called Mut; she has a human head and wears the double crown of Lower Egypt. double crown). Their son was Chons.

The name of the sun god Ra was sometimes combined with that of Amon, especially in his role as "King of the Gods" At that time. In Egypt, the rulership of heaven belonged to the sun god, and Amon was the supreme god. Therefore, logically speaking, Amon was Ra. Amon was called "the king of the throne and the two lands", or more proudly Called the "King of the Gods".

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Horus (also known as Heru-sa-Aset Horus) =Sha=Asset, Hrw, Hr and Hor-Hekenu) are the patron saints of the pharaohs in ancient Egyptian mythology and are symbols of royal power. His image is that of a hawk-headed god.

Like many other gods, the nature of Horus, as well as the stories and legends about him, have continued to change over history. Horus can be seen as an amalgamation of many other gods associated with imperial power, the sky, etc. Most of these gods are sun gods. This is very similar to what Christianity says about the Trinity of God.

Heru-ur (also known as Harmerti) was the earliest version of Horus, a creator god in the form of a falcon. His eyes are the sun and the moon. When the new moon appeared, he became blind and was called Mekhenty-er-irty (meaning "the one without eyes"); and when his sight was restored, he was called Khenty-irty (meaning "the one without eyes"). "He who has eyes"). Horus was very dangerous when blind, as he would sometimes mistake his friends for his enemies and attack. He was the son of Geb and Nut and the patron saint of Letopolis.

The child Horus was called Har-pa-khered (meaning "child Horus", or Harpocrates in Greek), a descendant of Osiris and Isis or Banebdjetet With the son of Hatmehit. He is depicted as a naked boy with his fingers in his mouth, seated on a lotus with his mother. In this form Horus was a fertility god who often carried a cornucopia. The image of Har-pa-Khered was widespread during the Roman Empire, when he was depicted riding a goose or a ram (note that his father, Banebdjetet, was a ram god).

Later, Horus was definitely positioned as the son of Osiris' corpse and Isis (or the acacia tree that emerged from Saosis). This is often cited as "the Horus" in many scholarly works.

As Har-nedj-itef (called Harendotes in Greek), Horus was Osiris's guardian in the underworld, the Duat.

As Behedti, Horus was the Behdet (now Edfu), where his image was closely associated with the falcon.

As Chenti-irti, Horus was the falcon god of law and order.

Later, Horus began to be combined with the image of the sun god Ra, especially in Heliopolis, and began to be called Ra-Herekhty (also called Ra -Heru-akhety, Her-akhety (meaning "Horus of the Two Horizons"), Har-em-akhet (meaning "Horus of the Horizon"), Horakhety, Harmachis (Greek)), toward Sun god.

Anhur is the name of Horus when he was combined with Hugh.

In the third millennium BC, Seth replaced Horus as the patron saint of the pharaohs. However, when the legend spread that Seth murdered his brother, Horus was replaced again. There was a battle between Horus and Set that lasted for eighty years. Horus tore off Seth's testicles and one of his legs, and Seth gouged out Horus's left eye (henceforth Horus was known as the "one-eyed"). Horus later regained his eyes. With the support of Neith, Horus won the battle and became the ruler of Upper and Lower Egypt (there are also legends that Horus and Seth were in charge of Upper and Lower Egypt).

Horus had four sons. In Egyptian funeral beliefs, they kept the viscera of the deceased in four canopic jars: Duamutef (stomach), Qebshenuf Kaibushanav (intestines), Hapi (lungs) and Imset (liver).

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Anubis is the god of death in ancient Egyptian mythology, and is sometimes regarded as the god of the underworld. god. He was the son of Seth and Nephthys. His name in hieroglyphics is pronounced closer to "amp".

Anubis has the head of a jackal (or other canine), and the jackal is his symbol. The image of this jackal is closely related to his role in mythology. Because the jackal is a scavenger, a scavenger of corpses, it is closely associated with death. He is also seen as the guardian of the dead. In art, Anubis is depicted as a jackal-headed male with erect ears and holding a whip.

Anubis was originally the Lord of the Underworld, but with the rise of the cult of Osiris, he became the gatekeeper. As the gatekeeper, Anubis' main duty was to weigh the souls of the dead against the feathers of Maat on the scales. If the soul is as light as a feather, Anubis takes him to Osiris, otherwise he feeds him to Ammit.

The worship of Anubis may even predate Osiris. In the Unas text (line 70) he is associated with the Eye of Horus. In the Book of the Dead, he anointed the body of Osiris, wrapped him in linen woven by Isis and Nephthys, and laid his hands on Osiris' body to protect him.

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Thoth, also translated as Thoth or Tut, is the god of wisdom in ancient Egyptian mythology , responsible for guarding Wen Yun and the secretary. According to legend, he was the inventor of ancient Egyptian writing.

The Beginning of Heaven and Earth

At the beginning of Egyptian history, Egyptians worshiped their country's animals: crocodiles, bulls, cats, baboons, snakes, beetles, etc. Later, they created their gods in human form, but still retained the animal heads, with human bodies connected below, such as the Egyptian main god Amon Ra (the sun god), sometimes symbolized by a ram head; the nurturing goddess Hat Huo holds the head of an ox; Shekmet, the fierce war goddess, has the head of a lion; Thoth, the god of science, has the head of a white crane.

According to the ancient Egyptians, at the beginning of the world, Buda, the god of creation, created a primordial egg on his pottery cart, from which the universe hatched.

Nut, the god of the sky, and Keb, the god of the earth, united to give birth to Osiris and Isis, and then Osiris and Isis also became husband and wife. Nut and Keb also gave birth to Set and Nephthys, who also married.

Due to the Egyptians’ belief in gods, belief in immortality and emphasis on funerals, Egypt has left many temples and tomb-making art. Since ancient times, the Egyptians have believed that many things are divine. They not only give names to gods, but also believe in them. For example, belief in animals-like gods (holy beasts) is a characteristic. Some gods are just intact animal images, some gods have an animal head placed on the human body, some are statues with symbols of gods on their heads, and some are all human-like. Holding symbol of god in hand.

From the First Dynasty to the Fourth Dynasty, everyone believed in the god Hors. Everyone believed that the pharaoh was a descendant of the god Hors and the representative of the god Hors on earth. The god Hors is the god of light and appears in the form of an eagle, and the sacred animal of Hors is also an eagle. The pharaoh's name usually had an eagle painted on it.

Fifth, after the Sixth Dynasty, the god worshiped in Egypt gradually changed to the sun god "Ra". By the time of the New Empire, faith was transferred to the god Amon, who became the national god of Egypt.

Each god in Egypt has his own scope of power. Different places have the same requirements for different gods, and different places have the same requirements for different gods. Different gods may have the same functions, but the personality of each god is more difficult to grasp.

Roughly speaking, Egyptian gods can be divided into three types: (1) animal form (2) human form (3) abstract form

In addition, there are also different types according to the region. Divided into three systems:

(1) Buda, the god of craftsmen in Memphis and the creator god of the world. He existed before the world happened. The way he created the world was through his thoughts and words. What he thought in his heart and said with his mouth, everything in the world, including other gods, was created by him. came out.

(2) It has been developed in the Old Kingdom. The system centered on the city of Heliopolis believes that before the world was created, there was a great god named Atum. Tumu fertilized itself and gave birth to air (Hugh) and water vapor (Tefna); air and water vapor combined to give birth to sky (nut) and earth (keb, geb); the combination of heaven and earth gave birth to O There are four children, including Siris, Isis, Seth, and Nephthys. These four are the creators of everything in the world.

(3) The city of Hermopolis from the south of Upper Egypt, its process of creation is also quite abstract. When the world was chaotic and unclear, four pairs of gods appeared, respectively. Belonging to the four properties of "dark, deep, invisible, and boundless", these eight gods created the world. They respectively represent unknowable eras or unknowable local characteristics.

Primary Water

The belief in primordial water is the most common view among the three systems, but they have different explanations.

There are eight meanings about Hermopolis, and they are also eight gods. These eight gods are represented by men and women holding the four characteristics of the original water. The male god Na Wu and the goddess Naunaid represent "abyss"; the male god Fufu and the goddess Hawuhaide represent "infinity"; the male god Kuk and the goddess Kakved represent "darkness"; the male god Ammu and The goddess Ama'ud means "the invisible".

Among these eight gods, the male god is represented by the posture of a frog's head, and the goddess is represented by the posture of a snake's head. It is said that these gods swim in the original water and gave birth to the original here. However, there is another theory that these eggs are born from giant ducks or giant geese. In addition, in the inheritance of the throne, it is said that lotus flowers are born from the original water, and cute children fly out of the lotus flowers. It is he who creates the world; and this child represents the sun in the morning, which merges with the lotus at night.

In the myth of Hermopolis, the Lord of the Universe once said: I made various gods with my sweat, and humans with my tears.

In ancient Egyptian paintings, humans are called Rumet, which can be interpreted as tears.

In the legend of Heliopolis, it is believed that Atum created the power of various gods in the world. For this reason, there is also a theory that Atum is the son of Nun, the primordial water. On the high hill or ground created after the great flood, Atum stood on the rock and spit out the male god Hugh and the goddess Tefna from his mouth. Hugh and the goddess Tefna combined to give birth to the male god Kebu and the goddess Nut. ; When the two of them were about to be united, they were pulled apart by their father God Hugh, who placed Keb on the ground and sent Nut into the sky. However, they still got married and gave birth to Osiris and Isis. , Seth, and Nephthys are the four pillar gods.

Osiris

Osiris was the eldest son of the earth god Keb and the sky goddess Nut. After he became king, he taught the Egyptians to cultivate the land and taught them how to cultivate the land. The benefits of civilization. The land of Egypt has been blessed with smooth weather and peace every year, and has guided people from the era of eating hair and drinking blood to the road of civilization. Osiris' brother Set, the god of darkness and desert, was very jealous of Osiris, so he put him in a box and exiled him to the Nile. The box traveled to the port of Byblos in Phoenicia, and was then brought back to Egypt by Osiris's wife Isis, who gave birth to her son Hors (god of falcons) while looking after the box.

After Seth discovered the box containing Osiris, he broke the box into pieces, dismembered Osiris' body, and scattered the body parts throughout the Nile. Isis was very sad. She ran all over the country along the Nile River, and finally collected all the body fragments scattered everywhere, and asked Anubis, the god of funerals, to wrap the fragments with ribbons and make them into Became the first mummy. Isis fanned the corpse with her wings, and worked with her sister Nephthys to use magic to resurrect Osiris, and Osiris became the king of the underworld. Hors and his uncle Seth competed for the throne on earth. Finally, through the arbitration of the gods, Hors inherited his father's authority in Egypt, while Osiris became the god of the Nile and ruled the underworld.

As this legend describes, the king of the earth that everyone believes in is Hors, who controls everything on the earth, while Osiris controls the underworld.

During the Middle Kingdom, the belief in Osiris became more common and more powerful. At this time, many people went to worship Saint Abydus, where Osiris was buried. In order to pray for the happiness of the family in the underworld, they built monuments or statues one after another.

The story of Osiris is usually described in tombs. Osiris guides the king, queen or nobles after death, or the deceased brings things to Osiris. many. In the picture, Osiris wears a white crown, decorated with two feathers on both sides, and holds a whisk and wat called Tikka in his hand. These things are symbols of the ruler, showing the dignity of the king in the underworld.

The shape of Isis is usually a pair of horns and a sun disk on her head, with the hieroglyph of Isis on her head, and her hand holding ankh, which symbolizes life. She is sometimes seen holding her baby, Halls.

Judgment of the Dead

Anubis, who mummified Osiris, although he was just the protector of a place before, later became the God of Death, specializing in burials. The patron saint of mummies. His appearance is usually that of a mountain dog.

The deceased is brought before Osiris by Anubis (the dog-headed god), and must work hard to prove his innocence in life. The heart is considered to be the residence of human consciousness, so the heart is placed on the scale of a scale, and the feather symbolizing justice is placed on the other side of the scale. If the heart is heavier than the feathers, the person will not pass the trial and the deceased will be handed over to the devil with the head of a crocodile. If the feather is heavier than the heart, the deceased is a good person with no fault, and then the deceased will be taken to a paradise in the underworld by Halls to live in it and obtain eternal life. However, to live in the Paradise, one must regularly take turns farming for Osiris, so it evolved into placing dolls in the tombs of the deceased, and the dolls would perform labor on the deceased's behalf.

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Hathor (Het-Heru, Het -Hert)

The Wife of Horus

The Egyptian goddess of fertility, the most beautiful of all the goddesses in ancient Egypt, transformed into a bull. One of the oldest Egyptian goddesses, mentioned in Greek as the Sky Goddess. It is often regarded as the same as Isis and is mainly worshiped in Edfu, considered to be the wife of Horus. It was once considered the god of death in Thebes, but is generally considered the god of love, dance, wine and foreign countries.

Greek mythology:

Norse mythology:

Charlemagne’s Twelve Paladins

King Arthur:

If you like novels, read "Space of the Gods" or the dnd book. dnd refers to the multiverse series "Dark Elves" in the abyss, hell, and heaven mountain.