Character Archive

Myths featuring Thoth

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

63 myths currently featured for Thoth.

Anubis Inventing Mummification to Preserve Osiris's Assembled Body

🏺 Egyptian MythologyAbydos, EgyptAnubis • Osiris • Isis

Following the treacherous murder and dismemberment of the god-king Osiris by his brother Set, the goddesses Isis and Nephthys painstakingly gathered the scattered remains. To prevent the king's body from decaying and to ensure his transition into the afterlife, the jackal-headed god Anubis developed the first rituals of mummification. By treating the flesh with natron, resins, and sacred...

Isis Constructing a Golden Phallus to Complete Osiris's Body

🏺 Egyptian MythologyAbydos, EgyptIsis • Osiris • Set

Following the brutal murder and dismemberment of King Osiris by his brother Set, the goddess Isis undertook a divine quest to recover his scattered remains. After finding all but one piece of his body, she utilized her supreme magic and the aid of Thoth and Anubis to craft a golden replacement and reassemble the god. This act of restoration and the subsequent mummification allowed Osiris to...

The Oxyrhynchus Fish Swallowing the Phallus of Osiris

🏺 Egyptian MythologyOxyrhynchus (El Bahnasa), EgyptOsiris • Isis • Set

After the god Osiris was murdered and dismembered by his brother Set, his wife Isis searched the Nile for his remains. She recovered every piece except for his phallus, which had been swallowed by an Oxyrhynchus fish in the river. This event led to the fish becoming sacred and taboo in the region, and Isis was forced to use her magic to fashion a replacement to resurrect her husband.

Set Dismembering Osiris into 14 Pieces and Scattering Them Across Egypt

🏺 Egyptian MythologyNile River, EgyptOsiris • Set • Isis

After the jealous god Set murdered his brother Osiris, he discovered the hidden body and tore it into fourteen fragments to prevent his resurrection. These pieces were scattered across the Nile Valley, prompting the goddess Isis to undertake a monumental journey to recover them. This central myth explains the origin of the Egyptian nomes and the establishment of Osiris as the eternal Lord of...

Set Discovering the Hidden Body of Osiris While Hunting by Moonlight

🏺 Egyptian MythologyNile Delta, EgyptOsiris • Set • Isis

While hunting a wild boar by the light of a full moon, the god Set accidentally discovers the hidden sarcophagus of his brother Osiris in the marshes of the Nile Delta. In a fit of rage and to ensure Osiris could never return to life, Set tears the body into fourteen pieces and scatters them throughout the land of Egypt. This act of desecration forces the goddess Isis to begin an arduous...

Osiris Civilizing Egypt and Teaching Humanity Agriculture

🏺 Egyptian MythologyTemple of Osiris, AbydosOsiris • Isis • Set

Osiris, the firstborn son of Earth and Sky, transformed Egypt from a land of lawlessness and hunger into a beacon of civilization. He introduced the cultivation of wheat and barley, the production of wine and beer, and established the first codes of justice and religious worship. This golden age under his reign represents the transition of humanity from primitive survival to a structured...

Set Tearing His Way Out of Nut's Womb

🏺 Egyptian MythologyOmbos (Naqada), EgyptSet • Nut • Geb

In the early ages of the Egyptian cosmos, the sky goddess Nut was forbidden from giving birth on any day of the year. Through Thoth's cunning, five extra days were created, during which Nut's children were born, including the chaotic god Set. Unlike his siblings, Set violently forced his way out of his mother's side, marking his arrival with turmoil and establishing his cult at Ombos.

Isis Born on the Fourth Intercalary Day in the Delta Swamps

🏺 Egyptian MythologyButo (Tell El Fara'in), EgyptIsis • Nut • Geb

Following a celestial gamble by the god Thoth, five intercalary days were added to the Egyptian calendar to allow the goddess Nut to give birth to her children. On the fourth of these miraculous days, Isis was born within the lush, verdant marshes of the Nile Delta near the ancient city of Buto. Emerging as a master of magic and wisdom, her birth in the Delta swamps established her profound...

Nut Giving Birth to Osiris on the First Intercalary Day

🏺 Egyptian MythologyThebes (Luxor), EgyptNut • Geb • Ra

When the sun god Ra cursed the sky goddess Nut so she could not give birth on any day of the year, the wise god Thoth intervened. By winning moonlight in a game of chance with the moon god Khonsu, Thoth created five extra days that existed outside the standard calendar. On the first of these intercalary days, Nut gave birth to Osiris, the god who would eventually become the lord of the...

Thoth Winning Five Extra Days in a Game of Senet Against Khonsu

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHermopolis (El Ashmunein), EgyptThoth • Khonsu • Nut

Ra cursed the goddess Nut so she could never give birth on any day of the year. Thoth, the god of wisdom, challenged the moon god Khonsu to a game of Senet to win a fraction of his light. Thoth won enough moonlight to create five extra days, allowing Nut to finally bear her five divine children.