- Sejarah dunia
- Amduat
- List of Egyptian deities
- Ancient Egyptian deities
- Index of Egyptian mythology articles
- Gate deities of the underworld
- Cavern deities of the underworld
- List of African deities and mythological figures
- List of lunar deities
- List of death deities
- Lists of deities
- List of fire deities
list of egyptian deities
List of Egyptian deities GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
Ancient Egyptian deities were an integral part of ancient Egyptian religion and were worshiped for millennia. Many of them ruled over natural and social phenomena, as well as abstract concepts These gods and goddesses appear in virtually every aspect of ancient Egyptian civilization, and more than 1,500 of them are known by name. Many Egyptian texts mention deities' names without indicating their character or role, while other texts refer to specific deities without even stating their name, so a complete list of them is difficult to assemble.
Major deities
= Gods
=Aker – A god of Earth and the horizon
Amun – A creator god, Tutelary deity of the city of Thebes, and the preeminent deity in ancient Egypt during the New Kingdom
Anhur – A god of war and hunting
Anubis – The god of funerals, embalming and protector of the dead
Apis – A live Bull worshiped as a god at Memphis and seen as a manifestation of Ptah
Aten – Sun disk deity who became the focus of the monolatrous or monotheistic Atenist belief system in the reign of Akhenaten, was also the literal Sun disk
Atum – A creator god and solar deity, first god of the Ennead
Bennu – A solar and creator deity, depicted as a Heron
Bes – Apotropaic god, represented as a dwarf, particularly important in protecting children and women in childbirth
Geb – An earth god and member of the Ennead
Heru-ur – A elder form of Horus
Horus – A kingship god, usually shown as a Falcon or as a human child, linked with the sky, the Sun, kingship, protection, and healing; often said to be the son of Osiris and Isis
Imhotep – Architect and Vizier to Djoser, eventually deified as a healer god
Khepri – A solar creator god, often treated as the morning aspect of Ra and represented by a scarab beetle
Khnum – A Ram god, the Tutelary deity of Elephantine, who was said to control the Nile flood and give life to gods and humans
Khonsu – A Moon god, son of Amun and Mut
Maahes – A Lion god, son of Bastet
Montu – A god of war and the Sun, worshiped at Thebes
Min – A god of virility, as well as the cities of Akhmim and Qift and the Eastern Desert beyond them
Nefertem – A god of the lotus blossom from which the sun god rose at the beginning of time Son of Ptah and Sekhmet
Osiris – A god of death and resurrection who rules Duat and enlivens vegetation, the sun god, and deceased souls
Ptah – A creator deity and god of craftsmen, the Tutelary deity of Memphis
Ra – The foremost Egyptian sun god, involved in creation and the afterlife Mythological ruler of the gods, father of every Egyptian Pharaoh, and the Tutelary deity of Heliopolis
Set – An ambivalent god, characterized by violence, chaos, and strength, connected with the desert. Mythological murderer of Osiris and enemy of Horus, but also a supporter of the Pharaoh
Shu – Embodiment of wind or air, a member of the Ennead
Sobek – A Crocodile god, worshiped in the Faiyum and at Kom Ombo
Thoth – A Knowlage god, and a god of writing and scribes, and Tutelary deity of Hermopolis
= Goddesses
=Amunet – Female counterpart of Amun and a member of the Ogdoad
Anput – The goddess of funerals, embalming, and protector of the dead, female counterpart to Anubis
Anuket – A feathered headdress-wearing goddess of Egypt's southern frontier regions, particularly the lower cataracts of the Nile
Bastet – Goddess represented as a cat or lioness, tutelary deity of the city of Bubastis, linked with protection from evil
Bat – A cow goddess from early in Egyptian history, eventually absorbed by Hathor
Hathor – One of the most important goddesses, linked with the sky, the Sun, sexuality and motherhood, music and dance, foreign lands and goods, and the afterlife. One of many forms of the Eye of Ra, she is often depicted as a cow
Heqet – A frog goddess said to protect women in childbirth
Hesat – A maternal cow goddess
Imentet – An afterlife goddess closely linked with Isis and Hathor
Isis – Wife of Osiris and mother of Horus, linked with funerary rites, motherhood, protection, and magic. She became a deity in Greek and Roman religion
Maat – A goddess who personified truth, justice, and order
Menhit – A solar lioness goddess who personified the brow of Ra
Mut – Consort of Amun, worshiped at Thebes
Neith – A creator and hunter goddess, tutelary deity of the city of Sais in Lower Egypt
Nekhbet – A vulture goddess, the tutelary deity of Upper Egypt
Nephthys – A member of the Ennead; the consort of Set who mourned Osiris alongside Isis
Nut – A sky goddess, a member of the Ennead
Pakhet – A lioness goddess mainly worshiped in the area around Beni Hasan
Renenutet – An agricultural goddess
Satis – A goddess of Egypt's southern frontier regions
Sekhmet – A lioness goddess, both destructive and violent and capable of warding off disease, protector of the Pharaohs who led them in war, the consort of Ptah and one of many forms of the Eye of Ra
Serket – A scorpion goddess, invoked for healing and protection
Tefnut – A lioness goddess of moisture and a member of the Ennead
Wadjet – A cobra goddess, the tutelary deity of Lower Egypt
Wosret – A goddess of Thebes
= Male and Female forms or Hermaphroditic
=Hapi – Personification of the Nile flood
Heh and Hauhet – Personifications of infinity and members of the Ogdoad
Kek and Kauket – The god and goddess of Chaos and Darkness, as well as being the concept of primordial darkness
Neper and Nepit – A god and goddess of Grain
Nu and Naunet – Personifications of the formless, watery disorder from which the world emerged at creation and members of the Ogdoad
Tatenen – Personification of the first mound of earth to emerge from chaos in ancient Egyptian creation myths
Minor deities
= Gods
=Aa – A creator god, member of the Shebtiu
Aani – A protector Ape headed god
Aati – One of the Assessors of Maat
Abtu – A fish god that swam in front of Ra's solar barge
Abu – An early Egyptian god of Light that was likely worshiped in the city of Elephantine
Aby – A god in Duat
Akhty – A horizon god depicted as a Northern bald ibis
Am-heh – A dangerous Duat god
Amenhotep I – The second Pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty, deified
Amenhotep, son of Hapu – A scribe and architect in the court of Amenhotep III, later deified for his wisdom
Amu-Aa – A god who accompanies Osiris during the second hour of the night
An-a-f – One of the Assessors of Maat
An-hetep-f – One of the Assessors of Maat
Andjety – A god of the ninth nome of Upper Egypt
Ani – A god of festivals
Apedemak – A warlike Lion god from Nubia who appears in some Egyptian-built temples in Lower Nubia
Apep – A Serpent deity who personified malevolent chaos and was said to fight Ra in Duat every night
Apesh – An evil Turtle god
Aqen – A deity in Duat
Arensnuphis – A Nubian deity who appears in Egyptian temples in Lower Nubia in the Greco-Roman era
Ash – A god of the Libyan Desert and oases west of Egypt
Astennu – A Baboon god associated with Thoth
Ba – A god of fertility
Ba-Ra – A god
Baal – Sky and storm god from Syria and Canaan, worshiped in ancient Egypt during the New Kingdom
Babi – A Baboon god characterized by sexuality and aggression
Banebdjedet – A Ram god, Tutelary deity of the city of Mendes
Ba-Pef – A little-known Duat deity; Ram-headed god of the eighth hour
Bata – A Bull god, the brother of Anubis
Buchis – A live Bull god worshiped in the region around Thebes and a manifestation of Montu
Dedun – A Nubian god, said to provide the Ancient Egyptians with incense and other resources that came from Nubia
Denwen – A Serpent and dragon god
Djebuty – Tutelary deity of Edfu
Djedefhor – Son of Pharaoh Khufu who was deified after death because he wrote a book considered to be the work of a god
Djefa – God of abundance
Dionysus-Osiris – A Greco-Egyptian life-death-rebirth god who was a syncretism from Dionysus and Osiris
Duamutef – A son of Horus
Dua – A god
Duau – A Moon god
Fa – A god of destiny
Fetket – A butler of Ra
Gengen-Wer – A celestial Goose god who guarded the celestial egg containing the life force
Ha – A god of the Libyan Desert and oases west of Egypt
Hapi-Wet – God of the Nile in heaven
Hapy – A son of Horus
Har-em-akhet – Sphinx god, form of Horus
Harpocrates – A form of Horus depicted as a child that developed in and was worshiped in Ptolemaic Egypt
Harsomtus – A child god of Edfu
Hauron – A protector and healing god, originally a Canaanite god
Heka – Personification of magic
Hemen – A Falcon god
Heneb – A god of grain
Henkhisesui – God of the east winds
Heqaib – Nomarch of the first nome of Upper Egypt, deified after his death because of his military skill
Hermanubis – A Greco-Egyptian god who was a syncretism from Hermes and Anubis
Hermes Trismegistus – A Greco-Egyptian god and legendary author of the Hermetica who was a syncretism from Hermes and Thoth
Heru-Khu – A god in the fifth division of Duat
Hery-Maat – A funerary deity depicted as a seated naked man
Hery-sha-duat – A Duat god in charge of the fields of Duat
Heryshaf – Ram god worshiped at Herakleopolis Magna
Hez-Ur – A little-known Baboon god
Hraf-haf – A ferryman for the dead and one of the Assessors of Maat
Hu – Personification of the authority of the spoken word
Hutchai – The god of the west winds
Iah – A Moon god
Igai – God of oases and Egypt's Western Desert
Ihy – A child deity born to Horus and Hathor, representing the music and joy produced by the sistrum
Imsety – A son of Horus
Irer – Personification of sight
Jupiter Ammon – A Roman-influenced god who was syncretism from Jupiter and Amun worshiped at the Siwa Oasis in Egypt
Kagemni I – A Vizier to Sneferu who wrote the Instructions of Kagemni, later deified
Kemwer – A bull god
Khenti-Amentiu – A necropolis deity
Khenti-kheti – Crocodile or Falcon god worshiped at Athribis
Kherty – A Duat god, usually depicted as a ram
Khesfu – A god who carries a spear in the tenth division of Duat
Kneph – A Ram creator god
Kolanthes – A child god, son of Min, and Repyt
Kothar-wa-Khasis – A Ugaritic god rarely mentioned in Egyptian literature
Mandulis – A Lower Nubian Sun deity who appeared in some Egyptian temples
Mau – A cat god and form of Ra
Medjed – A god from the Book of the Dead
Mehen – A Serpent god who protects the barque of Ra as it travels through Duat
Mnevis – A live Bull god worshiped at Heliopolis as a manifestation of Ra
Nebnerou – A lion-headed deity with knives
Nefer Hor – A son of Thoth and form of Horus
Neferhotep – A son of Hathor worshiped in Hu
Nehebkau – A protective serpent god
Nekheny – A predynastic Falcon god
Nemty – Falcon god, worshiped in Middle Egypt, who appears in myth as a ferryman for greater gods
Pataikos – A dwarf protector god
Panebtawy – A child god, son of Heru-ur
Petbe – God of revenge
Peteese – Brother of Pihor who drowned in the Nile, later deified
Pihor – Brother of Peteese who drowned in the Nile, later deified
Ptahhotep – Writer of a Wisdom Text, later deified
Qebehsenuef – A son of Horus
Qebui – God of the north winds
Ra-Horakhty – A form of Ra in which he is joined with Horus
Rekhyt – A Sun god associated with lapwings that originated as a name for a people
Rem – Fish god and the personification of Ra's tears
Resheph – A Syrian war god adopted into Ancient Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom, depicted with beard and the crown of Upper Egypt
Sah – Personification of the constellation Orion
Sebeg – Personification of the planet Mercury
Sebiumeker – Guardian god of procreation and fertility, he was a major god in Meroe, Nubia
Sed – A Jackal deity who protected kingship
Sedjem – Personification of hearing
Seker – God of the Memphite Necropolis and of the afterlife in general
Sekhemus – A god in the fourth hour of Duat
Sepa – A centipede god who protected people from snake bites
Sepes – A god who lived in a tree
Septu – A bearded, plume-wearing god
Serapis – A Greco-Egyptian god from the Ptolemaic Period who fused traits of Osiris and Apis with those of several Greek gods husband of Isis who, like her, was adopted into Greek and Roman religion outside Egypt
Seta-Ta – A mummified god in the fourth division of Duat
Setcheh – A serpent demon
Setem – A god of healing
Shed – A god believed to save people from danger and misfortune
Shehbui – God of the south winds
Shepsy – Local sun god in Hermopolis
Shezmu – A god of wine, blood, and oil presses who also slaughters condemned souls
Sia – Personification of perception
Sopdu – A god of the sky and of Egypt's eastern border regions
Teka-her – A serpent god in the fourth hour of Duat
Tenem – A creator god, husband of Tenemu
Tutu – An apotropaic god from the Greco-Roman era
Wai – A creator god, member of the Shebtiu
Wadj-wer – Personification of the Mediterranean Sea or lakes of the Nile Delta
Weneg – A plant god and son of Ra who maintains cosmic order
Wenenu – A protector god
Wepwawet – A jackal god, the tutelary deity of Asyut, connected with warfare and the afterlife
Yam – A Syrian god of the sea who appears in some Ancient Egyptian literature
= Goddesses
=Abaset – A hedgehog goddess
Ahmose-Nefertari – The mother of Amenhotep I, deified
Ahti – A malevolent hippopotamus goddess
Amathaunta – An ocean goddess
Amesemi – A Nubian moon goddess
Ammit – Goddess who devoured condemned souls
Amn – A goddess who welcomed souls of the dead in Duat
Anat – A war and fertility goddess, originally from Syria, who entered ancient Egyptian religion in the Middle Kingdom A daughter of Re, thus, in Egypt, a sister of Astarte
Anet – A fish goddess that swam in front of Ra’s solar barge
Anhefta – A protective spirit who guards one end of the ninth division of Duat
Anit – Wife of Andjety
Anuke – A war goddess
Aperet-Isis – One of the wives of Min
Astarte – A warrior goddess from Syria and Canaan who entered ancient Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom
Ay – A goddess who embodies the raging aspect of the returning goddess
Baalat Gebal – A Canaanite goddess, tutelary deity of the city of Byblos, adopted into ancient Egyptian religion
Beset – Guardian of women in childbirth and infants who appeared during the Middle Kingdom, the female counterpart and possibly the mother of Bes
Besna – Goddess of home security
Esna – A divine perch
Hatmehit – Fish goddess worshiped at Mendes
Hedetet – A scorpion goddess
Heptet – A knife-holding goddess of death
Henet – A pelican goddess
Heret-Kau – A protector goddess who protected the souls of the dead in the afterlife
Hert-ketit-s – A lioness-headed goddess in the eleventh division of Duat
Hert-Nemmat-Set – A goddess in the eleventh division of Duat who punishes the damned
Hert-sefu-s – A goddess in the eleventh division of Duat
Heru-pa-kaut – A mother goddess with a fish on her head
Heset – Goddess of food and drink
Hetepes-Sekhus – A personification of the eye of Ra, also a cobra goddess
Iabet – Goddess of fertility and rebirth
Iaret – Goddess that represented the Uraeus
Iat – A goddess of milk and nursing
Ipy – A mother goddess depicted as a hippopotamus
Ishtar – The East Semitic version of Astarte, occasionally mentioned in ancient Egyptian literature
Iunit – A wife of Montu
Iusaaset – A female counterpart to Atum; a goddess worshiped at Heliopolis
Iw – A creation goddess
Kebechet – Daughter of Anubis, goddess of freshness, she helps him in mummifying dead bodies
Ken – Goddess of love
Khefthernebes – A funerary deity
Khensit – A goddess from the twentieth nome of Lower Egypt
Khereduankh – Divine mother of Imhotep
Mafdet – A predatory goddess said to destroy dangerous creatures
Matit – A funerary cat goddess who had a cult center at Thinis
Mehet-Weret – A celestial cow goddess
Mehit – A warrior lioness goddess originally from Nubia worshiped at Abydos, consort of Anhur
Meretseger – A cobra goddess who oversaw the Theban Necropolis
Meret – The goddess of music who established cosmic order
Meskhenet – A goddess who presided over childbirth
Nakith – A goddess in Duat
Nebethetepet – A female counterpart to Atum
Nebtuwi – A fertility goddess
Nehbet-Anet – A goddess who is raped by Geb in the Tebtunis manual
Nehmetawy – A goddess, the consort of Nehebkau or Thoth
Pelican – Goddess of the dead
Perit – A goddess in Duat
Pesi – A goddess in Duat
Qererti – A goddess
Qerhet – Goddess of the eighth nome of Lower Egypt
Qed-her – Gate goddess in Duat
Qetesh – A goddess of sexuality and sacred ecstasy from Syria and Canaan, adopted into ancient Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom
Raet-Tawy – A female counterpart to Ra
Rekhit – A goddess in Duat
Renpet – Goddess who personified the year
Renpetneferet – Divine wife of Imhotep
Repyt – A wife of Min
Reret – A protector hippopotamus goddess
Sait – A goddess in Duat
Sehith – A goddess in Duat
Sekhat-Hor – A cow goddess
Sekhet-Metu – A goddess in Duat
Seret – A lioness goddess possibly originally from Libya
Sesenet-Khu – A goddess in Duat
Seshat – Goddess of writing and record-keeping, depicted as a scribe
Shemat-Khu – A goddess in Duat
Shentayet – A protective goddess, possibly of widows
Shenty – A cow goddess
Shesmetet – A lioness goddess
Sopdet – Personification of the star Sirius, mother of Sopdu
Swenet – Goddess related to Aswan
Ta-Bitjet – A scorpion goddess
Tafner – A vulture headdress-wearing goddess
Tasenetnofret – A wife of Heru-ur
Taweret – Hippopotamus goddess, protector of women in childbirth
Tayt – Goddess of weaving
Temet – A female counterpart to Atum
Temtith – A goddess in Duat
Tenemu – A creator goddess, wife of Tenem
Tetrads – Goddess of completeness
Tjenenyet – A goddess of brewing and protection
Themath – A goddess in Duat
Thermuthis – Goddess of fate, fertility, and harvest
Thmei – Goddess of truth
Unut – A goddess represented as a serpent or a hare, worshiped in the region of Hermopolis
Usit – A goddess in Duat
Wepset – A protector serpent goddess
Werethekau – A goddess who protected the Pharaoh
= Male or female
=Hedjhotep – God of fabrics and clothing
Shai – Personification of fate
Faltis – Personification of failure sculpture made by Khnum
= Objects
=Semi – A deified object found in the tenth division of Duat
Djed – Deified form of the Djed pillar
Lesser-known deities
= Gods
=Aakhu – A Ram headed god
Aakhu-hetch-t – A god of the dead
Aakhu-ra – A singing god of dawn
Aakhu-sa-ta-f – A warrior god
Aakhui – A god with two lotus scepters
Ami-beq – A god of the dead
Ami-haf – A god who has a harpoon
Ami-He-t-Serqet-Ka-hetep-t – A god
Ami-kar – A singing Ape god
Ami-kehau – A god
Ami-naut-f – A Serpent god
Ami-neht-f – A god
Ami-neter – A singing god
Ami-Nu – A sky god
Ami-Pe – A Lion god
Ami-ret – A god
Ami-sehseh – A god
Ami-sekhet-f – A god of his domain
Ami-sepa-f – A god
Ami-suht-f – A god of the ninth Aat
Ami-ta – A Serpent god
Ami-ut – God of the ninth day of the month
An-mut-f – A god
An-tcher-f – A god
Anmut-fabesh – A star god
Antywy – A god of the tenth nome of Upper Egypt god of the sixth hour of night
Ari – The creative god
Ari-em-aua – God of the sixth hour of night
Ari-en-ab-f – A blue eyed god
Ari-hetch-f – A light god
Ari-ren-f-tehesef – God of the tenth day of the month
Ari-tchet-f – A god of the ninth day of the month
Ari-Amen – A god
Athpi – A god of dawn
Ba-aakhu-ha-f – A Ram headed god
Ba-em-uar-ur – A god
Ba-ta – An Ape god
Ba-tau – A god worshiped at Cynopolis
Ba-utcha-hau-f – A Ram-headed god
Heb – A god
Hun-sahu – A god
Iaaw – Father of Ha
Khenti-en-Sa-t – A star god
Khenti-heh-f – A knife-eyed god who guarded the tomb of Osiris
Khenti-henthau – A god
Khenti-Het Anes – A god
Khenti-kha-t-anes – A knife-eyed god who guarded Osiris
Khenti-Khas – A god who protected noses of the dead
Khenti-qerer – A god
Maa-ab-khenti-ah-t-f – A god
Maa-atht-f – A god of the fourteenth Aat
Maa-en-Ra – An Ape doorkeeper god
Maa-f-ur – A god
Maa-ha-f – A ferry god
Maa-mer-f – God of the twenty-sixth day of the month
Maga – A Crocodile god
Men-t – A god
Meni – A god
Menu – A god of the fifth month
Menu-nesu-Heru – A warrior Bull god
Menu-qet – God of the first Aat
Met-en-Asar – A Serpent god
Met-her – A god of the dead
Metes – A doorkeeper god
Metes-ab – An Ibis headed god
Metes-neshen – A god
Meti – A Hawk headed god
Metni – A Hippopotamus god of evil
Metu-ta-f – A god
Neb – A Goose god, also a watcher of Osiris
Neb aa – A singing god of dawn
Neb amakh – A god who towed the boat of Af
Neb ankh – A singing god of dawn
Neb aq-t – A Jackal god
Neb Kheper-Khenti-Tuat – A Maat god
Neb Khert-ta – A star god
Neb pat – A god
Neb seb-t – A god
Neb Uast – A god of the boat of Pakhet
Neb-Un – A god
Neb user – A Ram-headed god
Neb utchat-ti – A Serpent god with human legs
Nebti – A god
Nekenher – A frightening god
Neter – A Serpent god
Neterti – A god in Duat
Neter bah – A god
Neter neferu – A god
Neter-hau – Nile god
Neter-ka-qetqet – A god who guarded Osiris
Neter-kha – God of one thousand years
Netrit-ta-meh – An axe god
Netrit-Then – An axe god
Nuuhuikhet – An Antelope-masked, Alpaca-eared god of freedom
Ra-ateni – A god
Unnti – The god of existence
Unta – A light god
Up – An Ape god
Up-hai – God of the dead
Up-shat-taui – A god
Up-uatu – A singing god
Upi-sekhemti – A Jackal-headed singing god
Upt-heka – Enchantment god
Upast – A light god
Upu – God of the Serpent Shemti
Ur – A god
Ur-ares – A god of a boat
Ur-at – A god of Kher-Aha
Ur-heka – A god of Denderah
Ur-henhenu – A water god
Ur-henu – A water god
Ur-khert – A Jackal god in the second Aat
Ur-maati-f – A god
Ur-metuu-her-aat-f – A god
Ur-pehti – A doorkeeper god
Ur-pehui-f – A god
Urrta – A god
= Goddesses
=Ami-khent-aat – A goddess of Edfu
Ami-pet-seshem-neterit – One of the twelve Thoueris goddesses
Ami-urt – A Cow goddess
Ami-utchat-saakhu-Atemt – One of the twelve Thoueris goddesses
Amit-Qetem – A goddess who assisted resurrecting Osiris
Amit-she-t-urt – A goddess
Apertra – A singing goddess
Arit-aakhu – A star goddess
Ariti – A goddess
Ba-khati – A goddess
Baiut-s-amiu-heh – A goddess
Hebit – An air goddess
Hetemit – Goddess of destruction
Hunit – Goddess of the twenty first day of the month
Hunit Pe – A Tutelary deity of Buto
Hunit urit – A Tutelary deity of Heliopolis
Huntheth – A Lioness goddess
Hurit urit – A goddess
Maa-a – A singing god
Maa-neter-s – A singing goddess
Neb aau – A goddess
Neb Aa-t – A goddess
Neb Aa-t-Then – A goddess
Neb-abui – A goddess
Neb akeb – A goddess
Neb Anit – A goddess
Neb ari-t-qerr-t – A goddess
Neb arit-tchetflu – Goddess who created reptiles
Neb as-hatt – A goddess
Neb as-ur – A goddess
Neb Ater – A goddess
Neb ater-Shema – A goddess
Neb aur – A goddess of the river
Neb Aut – A goddess
Neb Baa-t – A goddess
Neb hekau – The goddess of spells
Neb hetep – A Crocodile goddess
Neb Khasa – A goddess
Neb Khebit – The goddess of Chemmis
Neb pehti – A goddess
Neb Per-res – A goddess
Neb petti – A goddess
Neb Sa – A goddess
Neb Sam – A goddess
Neb sau-ta – A goddess
Neb sebu – A goddess
Neb Septi – A goddess
Neb-t aakhu – A Serpent goddess of dawn
Neb-t anemit – A goddess of offerings
Neb-t ankh – One of twelve goddesses who opened the gates of Duat to Af
Neb-t ankhiu – A goddess with two serpents
Neb-t Atu – A goddess
Nebt-Au-Khenti-Tuat – A Cow goddess who appears in the ninth hour of Ra's journey through Duat in the Book of Gates
Neb-t au-t-ab – A Cow goddess
Neb-t Kheper – A Serpent goddess
Neb-t-khu – A goddess in Duat
Neb-t-mat – A goddess in Duat
Neb-t-setau – A goddess in Duat
Neb-t-shat – A goddess in Duat
Neb-t-shefshefet – A goddess in Duat
Neb-t usha – Goddess of the eighth division of the Duat
Neb Un – A goddess
Nebt Annu – A goddess
Neterit-nekhenit-Ra – A singing goddess in Duat
Neseret – A uraeus goddess
Un-baiusit – A goddess
Unnit – A goddess
Unnuit – A goddess
Upit – A Serpent goddess
Ur-a – A goddess
Urit – A goddess
Urit-ami-t-Tuat – A goddess who escorted Ra
Urit-em-sekhemu-s – Goddess of the fourth hour
Urit-en-kru – A Lioness headed Hippopotamus goddess
Urit-hekau – Goddess of Upper Egypt
Urti-hethati – Goddess of Anu
= Male or female
=Neb au-t-ab – A god or goddess in the Duat
Netrit fent – An axe god or goddess
Groups of deities
The Aai – Three guardian deities in the ninth division of Duat; they are Ab-ta, Anhefta, and Ermen-ta
The Assessors of Maat – Forty-two deities, who judged the souls of the dead in the afterlife
The Cavern deities of the underworld – Many Duat deities charged with punishing the damned souls by beheading and devouring them
The Ennead – An extended family of nine deities produced by Atum during the creation of the world. The Ennead usually consisted of Atum, his children Shu and Tefnut, their children Geb and Nut, and their children Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys
The Four sons of Horus – Four gods who protected the mummified body, particularly the internal organs in canopic jars
The Gate deities of the underworld – Many dangerous guardian deities at the gates of Duat (flanked by divine Doorkeepers and Heralds), to be ingratiated with spells and by knowing their names
The Hemsut – Protective goddesses of Fate, destiny, and of the creation sprung from the primordial abyss; daughters of Ptah, linked to the concept of ka
The Her-Hequi – Four deities in the fifth division of Duat
The Horus of the day deities – Twelve divine embodiments of each hour of the day: partly major deities (first: Maat and Nenit, second: Hu and Ra em-nu, third: unknown, fourth: Ashespi-kha, Fifth: Nesbit and Agrit, sixth: Ahait, seventh: Horus and Nekait or Nekai-t, eighth: Khensu and Kheprit, ninth: Neten-her-netch-her and Ast em nebt ankh, tenth: Urit-hekau or Hekau-ur, eleventh: Amanh, and partly lesser-known ones (twelfth: "The One Who Gives Protection In The Twilight")
The Horus of the night deities – Twelve goddesses of each hour of the night, wearing a five-pointed star on their heads Neb-t tehen and Neb-t heru, god and goddess of the first hour of night, Apis or Hep (in reference) and Sarit-neb-s, god and goddess of the second hour of night, M'k-neb-set, goddess of the third hour of night, Aa-t-shefit or Urit-shefit, goddess of the fourth hour of the night, Heru-heri-uatch-f and Nebt ankh, god and goddess of the Fifth hour of the night, Ari-em-aua or Uba-em-tu-f and Mesperit, neb-t shekta or Neb-t tcheser, god and goddess of the sixth hour of the night, Heru-em-sau-ab and Herit-t-chatcha-ah, god and goddess of the seventh hour of the night, Ba-pefi and Ankh-em-neser-t or Merit-neser-t, god and goddess of the eighth hour of night, An-mut-f and Neb-t sent-t, god and goddess of the ninth hour of the night, Amset or Neb neteru and M'k-neb-set, god and goddess of the tenth hour of night, Uba-em-tu-f and Khesef-khemit or M'kheskhemuit, god and goddess of the eleventh hour, Khepri and Maa-neferut-Ra, god and goddess of the twelfth hour of the night
The Ikhemu-sek – Group of Ancient Egyptian deities who were the personifications of the northern constellations
The Khnemiu – Four deities wearing red crowns in the eleventh division of Duat
The Ogdoad – A set of eight gods who personified the chaos that existed before creation. The Ogdoad commonly consisted of Amun – Amunet, Nu – Naunet, Heh – Hauhet, and Kek – Kauket
The Renniu – Four bearded gods in the eleventh division of Duat
The Ruty – A pair of Lion gods who represents the horizon and guard Ra's solar barge
The Setheniu-Tep – Four deities wearing white crowns in the eleventh division of Duat
The Shebtiu – A group of creator gods worshipped at Edfu
The Souls of Pe and Nekhen – A set of gods personifying the predynastic rulers of Upper and Lower Egypt.
The Theban Triad – Consisted of Amun, his consort Mut and their son Khonsu
The Twelve Thoueris goddesses – (first:Ami-pet-seshem-neterit, second:Ami-utchat-saakhu-Atemt)
Citations
Works cited
Allen, James P. (2000). Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-77483-7.
Hart, George (2005). The Routledge Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses, Second Edition. Routledge. ISBN 0-203-02362-5.
Porter, Bertha; Moss, Rosalind (1991). Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Reliefs, and Paintings. Griffith Institute, Ashmolean Museum Oxford. ISBN 978-0-900416-82-8.
Wilkinson, Richard H. (2003). The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05120-8.
Lorton, Claude Traunecker. Transl. from the French by David (2001). The gods of Egypt (1st English-language edn, enhanced and expanded). Ithaca, N.Y [u.a.]: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-3834-9.
Budge, Sir Ernest A. Wallis (2010). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary (in two volumes, with an index of English words, king list and geographical list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, Coptic and Semitic alphabets). New York: Cosimo Classics. ISBN 978-1-61640-460-4.
"Aswan History Facts and Timeline: Aswan, Egypt". http://www.world-guides.com/africa/egypt/aswan/aswan_history.html.
Petry, Alan W. Shorter; with a new bibliography by Bonnie L. (1994). The Egyptian gods : a handbook (rev. edn). San Bernardino (Calif.): The Borgo Press. ISBN 0-89370-535-7.
"Gods of Egypt". http://www.touregypt.net/godsofegypt/.
Willockx, Sjef. "Amentet, Andjeti and Anubis: Three Ancient Egyptian Gods (2007)".
Mark, Joshua J. "Egyptian Gods – The Complete List". https://www.worldhistory.org/article/885/egyptian-gods---the-complete-list/.
Nelson, Thomas (2017). The Woman's Study Bible: Receiving God's Truth for Balance, Hope, and Transformation. Biblica, Inc.
"GVC09-24: Mystical creatures and gods -Egyptian". [1]
Durdin-Robertson, Lawrence (1979). Communion With The Goddess: Idols, Images, and Symbols of the Goddesses; Egypt Part III. Cesara Publications.
translations, translated by Raymond O. Faulkner; with additional; Wasserman, a commentary by Ogden Goelet JR.; with color illustrations from the facsimile volume produced in 1890 under the supervision of E.A. Wallis Budge; introduced by Carol A. R. Andrews; edited by Eva Von Dassow; in an edition conceived by James (1994). The Egyptian Book of the dead : the Book of going forth by day : being the Papyrus of Ani (royal scribe of the divine offerings), written and illustrated circa 1250 B.C.E., by scribes and artists unknown, including the balance of chapters of the books of the dead known as the theban recension, compiled from ancient texts, dating back to the roots of Egyptian civilization (1st edn). San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0767-3.
Further reading
Leitz, Christian, ed. (2002). Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen (in German). Peeters. Vol. I: ISBN 90-429-1146-8; Vol. II: ISBN 90-429-1147-6; Vol. III: ISBN 90-429-1148-4; Vol. IV: ISBN 90-429-1149-2; Vol. V: ISBN 90-429-1150-6; Vol. VI: ISBN 90-429-1151-4; Vol. VII: ISBN 90-429-1152-2; Vol. VIII: ISBN 90-429-1376-2.