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EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY

 

Mythology of Egypt and that of Sumer and Akkad have underlying resemblances. But the differences are more striking and important. Since the differences involve the authority, and authority is about ruling, let us start with the kingship in Egypt and Sumer-Akkad.

Sumerians believed that the authority to rule was sent down from 'up there' - from the supreme creators. Which means that the kings on earth were 'men of the supreme overseer.' Sumerian, Babylonian and Assyrian kings all declared themselves to be chosen and appointed by the gods. They acted as representatives of the gods in the rituals, and in some cases were deified after death. But in Egypt the king did not represent the god, HE WAS THE GOD (A god living on the earth among the mankind). While he lived he was called Horus (Egyptian god of light and the son of Osiris and Isis), and when dead he was Osiris, lord of the dead. Therefore a great deal of Egyptian myth is concerned with kingship and the Osiris-Horus cycle. Egyptians were preoccupied with death and afterlife very much, which lead to Osiris cult and its mythology, which also lead to mummification with its attendant myth and ritual. Another cult existed together with the Osiris cult and possibly more ancient in origin: the cult of Re the sun-god. Which also lead to a group of myths. Eventually these two cults became entwined, leading to a fusion of the myths of Osiris and Re. A third element was very important in Egyptian religion: The Nile. It had an all-enveloping aspect on the Egyptian life. The Nile was worshipped as a god and had a place in Egyptian ritual and mythology.

THE OSIRIAN MYTHS

The myth is about the conflict between Osiris and his brother Seth. The political element of this conflict reflects the course of struggle, which ultimately made Upper and Lower Egypt a united monarchy. The agricultural element of the myth shows us that Osiris is a vegetation god. Like the Akkadian Tammuz (Dumuzi of the Sumerians) he is a dying and rising god, dies with the dying vegetation and returns to life with its rebirth. Osiris is Khent-Amenti, Lord of the underworld. He presides over the tribunal which decides the fate of the departed souls, and in this aspect he is inseparably connected with the complicated ritual of mummification. The outline of the myth of Osiris is contained in the treatise De Iside by Plutarch. According to this account Osiris was a culture hero who taught the ancient Egyptians the art of agriculture and metal-working.

In the myth Osiris was the son of Geb, the earth-god, and his sister and wife was the goddess Isis, who ruled over Egypt with him and assisted him in his beneficient activities.

THE MYTHS OF RE, THE SUN-GOD

In Egypt the cult of the sun-god occupied a far more important place than it did in the ritual and mythology of Sumer and Akkad. Shamash, (The sun-god of Akkad) was the guardian of justice. But he never became one of the triad of gods, and he was never associated with myths of creation. Re, according to tradition, was the first king of Egypt and as Atum he was the creator of the world. As its name indicates, the city of Heliopolis was the chief centre of the cult of Re, and it was probably there that cult of Osiris and that of the sun-god merged during the Old Kingdom period. The Horus-falcon that is to be seen protecting the head of the pharaoh Khafre on his statue, shows the identification of Horus with Re and the association of the kingship with Re. The mythology of Re and of Osiris have become completely blended. But there are still some elements of the solar mythology which remain distinct from the Osiris myth.

CREATION MYTHS

Egyptian belief system is fluid and the creation myth assumes many forms. Underneath them all lies the basic experience of the sun's action upon the slime left by the receding waters of the Nile flood.. The earliest form of the myth, modified later by the theologies of Heliopolis and Memphis, presents the sun-god Atum-Re, seated upon the primeval hillock, and bringing into existence 'the gods who are in his following'. But Atum himself is depicted as rising out of Nun, the primeval ocean (This sounds familiar! Someone must have done some stealing). In the form of the myth which belonged to Hermopolis, in Middle Egypt, the emergence of Atum was due to the activity of the Ogdoad (These were conceived of as animal forms, four snakes and four dogs, representing primeval chaos. Their names were Nun and his consort Naunet, Kuk and Kauket, Huh and Hauhet and lastly Amon and Amaunet). Atum, emerging from the waters, brings the elements of chaos into order, so that they appear in the texts as gods functioning in their proper places. In an early form of the myth, according to the Pyramid Texts, Atum is represented as fertilizing himself and producing Shu (air) and Tefnut (moisture); from the union of this pair came Geb (earth-god) and Nut (sky-goddess); here the Heliopolitan theology introduced the figures of the Osirian group, and made Geb and Nut give birth to Osiris and Isis, side by side with Seth and Nephthys, thus completing the Heliopolitan Ennead.

There is another form of the myth arising from the desire of Memphis to vindicate its importance as the new capital of the first dynasties of Egypt. Ptah was the local god of Memphis, and the Memphite Theology, as the document which contains this form of the myth is usually called, transformed the Heliopolitan Ennead by giving the primacy in the activity of creation to Ptah. In the part of the Memphite Theology which concerns creation, Ptah is equated with Nun, the primeval ocean, and is presented as bringing Atum and all the gods of the Heliopolitan Ennead into existence by his divine word (Here it is again! The power of the word). What might be called the creed of the Memphite Theology is briefly summarized in the following passage of the text:

'Ptah who is upon the Great Throne

Ptah-Nun, the father who begot Atum;

Ptah-Naunet, the mother who bore Atum;

Ptah the Great, that is, the heart and tongue of the Ennead

(Ptah) who gave birth to the gods.'

'Heart' and 'tongue' in Egyptian thinking : The heart and tongue represent thought and speech, the attributes of the creator, and are deified as Horus and Thoth (The Moon-God of Egypt). By his thought and speech (In those days thinking-feeling was associated with heart, and a simple utterance by the supreme being was thought to be sufficient for the materialization of that thought. This heart and tongue issue could be found in Sumerians, Zoroastrianism, Mosaic belief system and Islam) Ptah brings the gods into existence, brings order out of chaos; (like Marduk) fixes the destinies (Here is another deity fixing the destinies), provides food for mankind, divides Egypt into provinces and cities, and assigns their places to the various local gods. Now hold tight!: This description of Ptah's creative activities closes with the words '..And so Ptah rested ( or was satisfiad), after he had made everything'. (Sounds familiar? Yes! The God of Moses and the Hebrews did (!) the same. And the account of creation in Genesis closes with an almost identical sentence). The identification of Ptah with Atum-Re constitutes the link between the Heliopolitan myth of Re as creator and the Memphite Theology which takes the myth as the basis for cosmological speculation of great subtlety.

How about the creation of man? Well it has no special place in Egyptian mythology. There are representations of the god Khnum fashioning mankind on the potter's wheel and there are various references in Egyptian texts to this special creative activity, but the line between man and the gods is not so sharply drawn as it is in Semitic religion. As a result the creation of man has a comparatively slight emphasis in Egyptian mythology.

THE OLD AGE OF RE

None of the flooding caused by the river Nile could be compared to the destructive floods caused by the Euphrates and Tigris. Therefore there is no Egyptian myth of the destruction of mankind by inundation. According to this myth Re grows old and feels that his authority over gods and man has diminished. He gathers an assembly of gods and tells them that men are plotting against him. He asks the advice of Nun, the eldest of the gods. Nun advises that the eye of Re, in the form of goddess Hathor, should be sent against mankind. Hathor is sent. She begins her slaughter and wades in blood. But apparently Re does not desire a complete destruction of mankind so he devises a plan for the making of seven thousand jars of barley beer dyed with red ochre to resemble blood. This is poured out on the fields to a depth of nine inches. When the goddes sees this flood shining in the dawn, reflecting her own face in its beauty, she is lured, she drinks and becomes drunk and forgets her rage against mankind. So mankind is saved from total destruction (So now you know who saved mankind from extinction!).

THE SLAYING OF APOPHIS

The serpent Apophis is the enemy of Re. In one text Seth is the agent of victory. Refresh your memory! Marduk is the agent of the gods in the conquest of the dragon Tiamat in the Akkadian myth. In another text the gods whom Re has given birth employ their magical powers to destroy Apophis. We have an interesting parallel here with the victory of Marduk over dragon Tiamat at the Babylonian New Year Festival.

THE SECRET NAME OF RE

This is a solar myth which concerns the magical potency of the name of a god. Isis wants to learn the secret name of Re. She thinks she might use it in her magic spells. She creates a snake, places it in the path of Re. Re comes out his palace, and snake bites him. Re is seized by terrible pains. He calls for the gods to a meeting. Among them is Isis with her magic skills. Re tells them what has happened to him, and begs Isis to relieve him. Isis tells him, in order for her spell to be effective she must know his secret name. Re tells her that he is Khepri in the morning, Re at midday, and Atum in the evening. But Isis tells him that none of these is his secret name of power. Finally he reveals his secret name on condition that it is made known to no god but Horus. Using Re's name of power Isis utters the spell which removes the effects of the snake's poison. The text ends with directions for the use of spell to cure snake-bite.

THOTH AS THE DEPUTY OF RE

Re orders Thoth, the Moon-God, to be summoned before him. When he appears Re tells him that he is to be Re's deputy and give light in the underworld, while Re shines in his proper place in the heavens. This is an aetiological myth intended to explain why the moon gives light at night.

MYTHS RELATED TO THE NILE

The Nile naturally occupies a large place in the mythology of Egypt. Mortuary rituals and myths of the Osiris cult, as well as the cult of Re are bound up with the myths connected to the Nile. The river was worshipped as a god under the name of Hapi. There is a famous statue of the Nile god in the Vatican Museum which represents the god reclining, holding ears of corn and a cornucopia, and surrounded by sixteen children, each a cubit high. This symbolizes the fact that if the Nile flood fell below sixteen cubits there would be famine. On a tomb at Abydos we have a representation of the two Niles bringing papyrus, lotus and various kinds of food and drink. The myth of the two Niles is contained in Akh-en-aton's famous hymn to the Aton/Aten, or Sun-disc. In this myth Aton creates two Niles, one in the underworld and another in the heavens above. Aton brings forth the underworld Nile to sustain the people of Egypt. The purpose of the heavenly Nile is to provide water to the foreign peoples. But the most important and significant aspect of the myths related to the river Nile is the one associated with the Osiris myth. In a hymn to Osiris Rameses IV says 'You are the Nile, gods and men live from your outflow.' One of the elements in the Osiris myth is the drowning of Osiris and his finding by Isis. Plutarch tells us that in the month of Athyr the priests used to go down to the river by night and fill a golden vessel with sweet water. As they do so, the people present in the ceremony cry 'Osiris is found.' Both the drowning and the finding of Osiris in the Nile play an important part in the seasonal rituals of Egypt.

 

These are only a few myths out of a vast and intricate mass of Egyptian mythology, as summarized by Spenta Mainyu fom the excellent study by S.H. Hooke titled Middle Eastern Mythology. That's that! But we should not leave Egypt without mentioning the first case of a monotheistic belief system: The one introduced by Akh-en-aton/Ikhnaton.

 

  First monotheism