Myths featuring Shu

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The Divine Tribunal Debating for 80 Years Over Who Should Rule Egypt

🏺 Egyptian MythologyHeliopolis (Cairo), EgyptHorus • Seth • Isis

Following the treacherous murder of King Osiris by his brother Seth, the divine tribunal of the Ennead convened in Heliopolis to settle the succession. For eighty long years, the gods Horus and Seth engaged in a series of magical and physical contests to prove their worthiness. Eventually, through the intervention of Isis and a stern warning from the underworld, Horus was crowned the rightful...

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...

Okuninushi and Sukunabikona Cooperating to Build and Cultivate the Islands

⛩️ Japanese MythologyIzumo Taisha, Shimane, JapanOkuninushi • Sukunabikona • Kamimushubi

This Japanese myth recounts the partnership between the benevolent deity Okuninushi and the dwarf god Sukunabikona, who arrived on a wave in a tiny boat. Together, they traveled across the Japanese archipelago, developing agriculture, establishing the arts of medicine, and taming wild beasts to make the land habitable. Their collaborative efforts laid the physical and spiritual foundations of...

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...

Sekhmet's Hot Breath and the Khamsin

🏺 Egyptian MythologyWestern Desert, EgyptRa • Sekhmet • Hathor

This myth describes the origin of the Khamsin, the scorching fifty-day desert wind, which is said to be the residual heat of the goddess Sekhmet's breath. Created by the sun god Ra to punish humanity, Sekhmet’s fury was so great that her presence permanently scorched the Western Desert. Even after being pacified by the gods, her fiery essence remains as a seasonal gale that sweeps across the...

Nut Giving Birth to Ra Every Morning, Painting the Sky with the Red Dawn

🏺 Egyptian MythologyEastern Horizon (Sinai Proxy)Nut • Ra • Geb

Every evening, the Egyptian sky goddess Nut swallows the sun god Ra, beginning a nightly journey through the stars of her own body. At the break of dawn, she gives birth to him once again in the east, an event marked by the brilliant red and orange hues of the sunrise which represent the labor of the cosmos. This eternal cycle ensures the daily renewal of life and the triumph of light over...

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.