Character Archive

Myths featuring Nun

Explore myths where Nun appears across cultures, conflicts, sacred places, and recurring themes.

15 myths currently featured for Nun.

Hapi the Nile God Pouring Water from Dual Jugs to Create the Annual Inundation

🏺 Egyptian MythologyGebel el-Silsila, EgyptHapi • Ra • Osiris

Hapi, the personification of the Nile's life-giving floods, resides in a secret cavern at the river's narrowest point in Gebel el-Silsila. By pouring water from his sacred dual jugs, he initiates the annual inundation that transforms the parched Egyptian desert into a fertile oasis. This myth celebrates the rhythmic balance of nature and the divine source of all sustenance in the Nile Valley.

Nefertem Emerging as a Beautiful Lotus Blossom from the Primordial Waters

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis (Mit Rahina), EgyptNefertem • Ptah • Sekhmet

Before the universe was formed, there existed only the dark, infinite primordial waters of Nun. From these depths, a magnificent blue lotus rose and unfolded its petals to reveal the young god Nefertem, who brought light and divine fragrance to the world. As the lord of the sunrise and the son of Ptah and Sekhmet, Nefertem represents the eternal cycle of renewal and the beauty of creation.

Neith Weaving the Fabric of the Universe on Her Celestial Loom

🏺 Egyptian MythologySais (Sa El Hagar), EgyptNeith • Nun • Ra

Neith, the primordial goddess of Sais, exists as the ultimate creator who wove the entire universe into being on her cosmic loom. Using the primeval waters of the Nun as her medium, she crafted the sun, the earth, and the destiny of all living things through the sacred art of weaving. This myth highlights her role as the 'Great Mother' and the intellectual force that organized chaos into a...

Khepri the Scarab Beetle Rolling the Morning Sun Over the Eastern Horizon

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHeliopolis (Cairo), EgyptKhepri • Ra • Atum

Khepri is the ancient Egyptian solar deity representing the rising sun, often depicted as a scarab beetle or a beetle-headed man. He is the personification of creation and renewal, tasked with rolling the sun across the sky and emerging from the underworld each dawn. This myth centers on his daily labor of pushing the solar disk from the eastern horizon to the zenith, ensuring the continuity...

Ra Retiring to the Heavens on the Back of the Sky Cow Nut

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHeliopolis (Cairo), EgyptRa • Nut • Shu

As the sun god Ra aged, he faced a rebellion from humans who mocked his frailty, leading him to nearly destroy mankind using his 'Eye' in the form of Sekhmet. After sparing humanity with a clever trick involving red-dyed beer, a weary Ra decided to leave the earthly realm, ascending to the heavens on the back of the sky-goddess Nut in her form as a celestial cow. This myth explains the...

Sekhmet Drinking the Red Beer, Getting Drunk, and Turning Back into Docile Hathor

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis (Mit Rahina), EgyptRa • Sekhmet • Hathor

In this foundational Egyptian myth, the aging sun god Ra sends his daughter, the Eye of Ra, to punish humanity for their rebellion. Transforming into the lioness Sekhmet, her bloodlust becomes so uncontrollable that she threatens to wipe out all life. To save humanity, Ra tricks her by flooding the land with seven thousand jars of red-dyed beer, which she mistakes for blood and drinks until...

Ra Taking Pity on Humanity and Ordering a Lake of Beer Dyed Red with Ochre

🏺 Egyptian MythologyElephantine (Aswan), EgyptRa • Sekhmet • Hathor

When the sun god Ra grew old and faced a human rebellion, he sent the goddess Sekhmet to punish the conspirators. However, her bloodlust became uncontrollable, threatening to wipe out all of mankind until Ra intervened with a clever ruse involving thousands of jars of beer dyed red. By tricking the goddess into drinking the beer, which she mistook for blood, Ra saved humanity and transformed...

Sekhmet Slaughtering Humans in the Desert and Drinking Their Blood

🏺 Egyptian MythologyWestern Desert, EgyptRa • Sekhmet • Hathor

When the sun god Ra grew old, he discovered that humans were plotting against his divine rule. He sent his daughter Sekhmet, the lioness-headed goddess of destruction, to punish them in the harsh Western Desert. Her bloodlust became so great that she nearly destroyed all of humanity, until Ra intervened with a clever trick involving red-dyed beer.

Hathor Transforming into the Bloodthirsty Lioness Sekhmet

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis (Mit Rahina), EgyptRa • Hathor • Sekhmet

When the sun god Ra becomes aged and human subjects plot against his rule, he sends his daughter Hathor to punish them. Transforming into the terrifying lioness Sekhmet, she begins a slaughter so vast it threatens to extinguish all life, forcing Ra to use a clever trick involving dyed beer to pacify her.

Ra Plucking Out His Eye and Sending It as Hathor to Punish Humanity

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHeliopolis (Cairo), EgyptRa • Hathor • Sekhmet

As the sun god Ra grew old, humanity began to plot against him, leading Ra to send his Eye in the form of a goddess to punish them. The Eye's destructive rage nearly wiped out all of mankind until Ra devised a clever plan to pacify her with red-dyed beer. This myth explains the dual nature of the goddess as both a fierce protectress and a lady of joy, as well as the origins of the Nile's...