Curated Mythology Archive

🏺 Egyptian Mythology Myths

Egyptian Mythology brings together legendary beings, origin stories, heroic journeys, and place-based traditions across a rich storytelling landscape.

127 myths currently featured from 🏺 Egyptian Mythology.

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...

Ra Growing Old and Humans Rebelling Against His Rule

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

As the sun god Ra grew physically frail with age, his human subjects plotted a rebellion against his divine authority in the deserts. Ra responded by unleashing the terrifying lioness Sekhmet to punish them, but he eventually used a clever ruse involving red-dyed beer to save humanity from total extinction.

Set Banished to the Desert Margins to Command the Fierce Storms

🏺 Egyptian MythologyWestern Desert, EgyptSet • Horus • Osiris

After the long conflict with Horus for the throne of Egypt, the god Set was assigned to rule the barren reaches of the Western Desert. While Horus maintained order in the fertile Nile Valley, Set became the master of the Red Land, commanding the fierce storms and protecting the sun god Ra from the serpent Apep. This myth illustrates the ancient Egyptian balance between the life-giving river...

Horus Finally Crowned the Rightful King of Upper and Lower Egypt

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis (Mit Rahina), EgyptHorus • Seth • Isis

After eighty years of grueling legal battles and physical combat against his uncle Seth, the sky god Horus is finally recognized by the divine Ennead as the rightful heir to his father Osiris. This victory results in the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under one divine sovereign, restoring Ma'at to the world. The narrative concludes the long-standing 'Contendings' with a formal...

Horus Presenting His Restored Eye to Osiris to Sustain Him in the Duat

🏺 Egyptian MythologyAbydos, EgyptHorus • Osiris • Set

Following his climactic struggle with Set, the god Horus recovers his gouged eye with the help of Thoth. Instead of keeping the powerful artifact for himself, Horus descends into the Duat to offer it to his father, Osiris. This act of filial devotion provides the deceased king with the spiritual sustenance needed to rule the underworld and legitimizes Horus as the rightful Pharaoh of Egypt.

Thoth Restoring the Eye of Horus (Wadjet) to Full Power

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHermopolis (El Ashmunein)Thoth • Horus • Set

After Horus lost his left eye during a fierce struggle with his uncle Set, the divine order of the universe was threatened by chaos and darkness. Thoth, the ibis-headed god of wisdom and magic, used his unique powers to locate the scattered fragments of the eye and painstakingly reassemble them. By adding a final piece of magical essence, Thoth transformed the eye into the Wadjet, a symbol of...

Hathor Restoring Horus's Eye with Gazelle Milk

🏺 Egyptian MythologyDendera Temple ComplexHorus • Hathor • Set

Following a brutal confrontation with his uncle Set, the sky god Horus is blinded and left helpless in the desert. The goddess Hathor, hearing his cries, finds him and uses the milk of a gazelle to restore his sight. This act of divine healing transforms Horus's eye into the Wedjat, a potent symbol of protection and cosmic balance.

Set Gouging Out Horus's Left Eye During a Fierce Struggle

🏺 Egyptian MythologyLetopolis (Ausim), EgyptHorus • Set • Thoth

During the epic conflict between the gods Horus and Set for the throne of Egypt, Set violently gouged out Horus's left eye in a moment of brutal combat. This eye, which represented the moon, was later found and restored by the god Thoth, becoming the powerful Wedjat symbol. The myth explains the phases of the moon and the ultimate triumph of divine order over chaos.

Thoth Replacing Isis's Severed Head with the Head of a Cow

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHermopolis (El Ashmunein)Thoth • Isis • Horus

Following a violent clash where the sun-god Horus decapitated his mother Isis in a fit of rage, the wisdom-god Thoth intervened to restore her life. Using his supreme magical knowledge at Hermopolis, Thoth replaced Isis's lost head with that of a cow, transforming her appearance and forever linking her to the goddess Hathor. This act preserved the balance of the divine family and illustrated...