Myths featuring Isis

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Baby Horus Fatally Bitten by a Scorpion Sent by Set

🏺 Egyptian MythologyChemmis (Akhmim), EgyptHorus • Isis • Set

After the murder of Osiris, Isis hides her infant son Horus in the marshes of Chemmis to protect him from the wrath of his uncle Set. While Isis is away, Set sends a venomous scorpion to strike the child, leaving him at the brink of death. Through powerful lamentations and the divine intervention of Thoth, the poison is neutralized, establishing Horus as a symbol of healing and protection.

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...

The Gods Retreating into the Heavens as the Age of Myth Ends and Mortals Rule

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

This myth describes the pivotal transition in Egyptian cosmology from a time when gods physically walked the Earth to the era of human pharaohs. After a period of direct rule and human rebellion, the sun god Ra chose to ascend to the heavens on the back of the celestial cow, Nut, establishing the boundaries between the mortal world and the divine realm. The subsequent reigns of Osiris and...

Serapis

🏺 Egyptian MythologySerapeum of AlexandriaSerapis • Ptolemy I Soter • Osiris

Serapis was a synthetic deity created in the 3rd century BCE to bridge the gap between Greek and Egyptian cultures. Combining the traits of the Egyptian god Osiris and the sacred bull Apis, he became the patron god of Alexandria and the supreme deity of the Ptolemaic Kingdom. His cult symbolized the political and religious fusion of two ancient civilizations under the rule of the Greek pharaohs.

Osiris Granting the Architect Amenhotep Son of Hapu a Place Among the Gods

🏺 Egyptian MythologyDeir el-Bahari (Luxor), EgyptAmenhotep son of Hapu • Osiris • Amenhotep III

This myth tells of the rare deification of the mortal architect Amenhotep, son of Hapu, who served under Pharaoh Amenhotep III. After a life of unparalleled wisdom and the construction of legendary monuments like the Colossi of Memnon, he was granted divinity by Osiris. His spirit was invited to reside within the sacred complex of Deir el-Bahari, where he became a god of healing and wisdom...

Ptah Forging the Bodies of the Gods Out of Precious Metals and Lapis Lazuli

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis (Mit Rahina), EgyptPtah • Ra • Isis

In the ancient cosmogony of Memphis, the creator god Ptah did not simply wish the world into existence but crafted it through intellectual conception and artistic labor. He is credited with forging the physical bodies of the other gods from gold, silver, and lapis lazuli, providing the divine spirits with material vessels to inhabit. This myth emphasizes the role of the artisan as a divine...

Wadjet the Cobra Goddess Spitting Fire at the Pharaoh's Enemies

🏺 Egyptian MythologyButo (Tell El Fara'in), EgyptWadjet • Ra • Horus

Wadjet, the cobra goddess of Buto, served as the primary protector of Lower Egypt and the Pharaoh's sovereignty. Often depicted as the Uraeus on the royal crown, she possessed the terrifying ability to spit fire at those who threatened the divine order. Her legend encompasses her role as a fierce guardian of the sun god Ra and the protective nurse of the infant Horus in the papyrus marshes.