Topic Archive

Myths about Solar Myth

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Solar Myth across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

6 myths currently featured for Solar Myth.

Nut Swallowing the Sun God Ra Every Evening at Sunset

🏺 Egyptian MythologyWestern Horizon (Giza Proxy)Nut • Ra • Geb

In the ancient Egyptian worldview, the sky goddess Nut swallows the sun god Ra every evening at sunset, signaling the end of the day. Ra travels through her body during the night hours, facing various trials and the serpent Apep in the underworld. Each morning, Nut gives birth to the sun in the east, renewing the cycle of life and maintaining cosmic order.

Ra Surrendering His True Name, Transferring Supreme Magic to Isis and Horus

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHeliopolis (Cairo), EgyptRa • Isis • Horus

In an era when the sun god Ra began to grow old, the clever goddess Isis plotted to gain his supreme power by learning his secret True Name. She crafted a magical serpent that bit Ra, causing him such unbearable agony that he was forced to reveal his hidden name to her in exchange for a cure. By obtaining this name, Isis secured the ultimate magical authority for herself and her son Horus,...

Ra Merging with Osiris at Midnight to Regenerate His Soul

🏺 Egyptian MythologyAbydos, EgyptRa • Osiris • Apep

Every night, the sun god Ra journeys through the underworld to confront darkness and entropy. At the stroke of midnight, he reaches the deepest sanctuary of the Duat to unite with Osiris, the god of the dead. This profound union allows Ra to be spiritually regenerated and reborn as Khepri at dawn, ensuring the continuation of cosmic balance and the survival of the world.

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...

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.

The Divine Bird Sun-Crow Carrying the Golden Sun Across the Sky Each Day

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, ChinaXihe • Dijun • Hou Yi

In ancient Chinese cosmology, the sun is personified as a divine three-legged crow known as the Jinwu or Yangwu. These celestial birds reside in the mythical Fusang tree in the East Sea, from which they take turns flying across the firmament to provide light and warmth to the world. This cycle represents the eternal balance of the cosmos, though it is most famous for the legend where ten...