The Ancient Gods have returned!
Name:
Wosyet
Known
Aliases: She who is strong
Associated: Protection, The Youth
Culture: Kemetic Egyptian
Celestial Home : Sirius
Gender: Female
Classification:
Minor Goddess
Element:
Mercury
Sacred
Stone: The Mahogany Obsidian
Weapons:
bow and arrow, the ax
Literature:
pyramid Text of the Middle Kingdom
Ancient
Goddess worshipped in Thebes During the Middle Kingdom.
Her
name means “Power”.
Her
Cult was centered at Thebes in Upper Egypt
She
is venerated as a protector of young Horus whom she was tasked with protecting.
And through that the protection of youth.
At
various times in his epic battle against his Uncle Set, Horus was aided by this
ancient goddess.
Wosret
was rarely depicted, and no temples to her have been identified. When she was
depicted, it was wearing a tall crown with the was sceptre (which was related
to her name) upon her head and carrying other weapons such as spears and a bow
and arrows.
She
was Amun's first wife.
An
Ancient Egyptian city was named for her.
She
was a minor goddess, but three pharaohs during the Twelfth Dynasty incorporated
her name into theirs: Senwosret, or Senusret, means "man of Wosret".
Name:
Naunet
Known
Aliases: the Mother of all Mothers
Associated: The Primeval waters of Chaos
Pantheon: Egyptian
Gender: Female
Literature:
Pyramid Text
Classification:
Primordial God
Element:
Water
Crystal:
Occupation:
Creator
Known
Affiliations The Ogdoad, Nun
Naunet is the one of the
eight ancient deities of Ogdoad theology in Hermopolis. She is the consort of
Nun and represented chaos and the primeval waters to which everything have
sprouted from nothingness. Like her three sisters Kauket, Amaunet and Hauhet,
she was represented as a woman with the head of a snake, mostly that of a
cobra. Her name may also be spelled as Nunet.
. She guards the twelve
veils of negation believed to be the flaws of the original creation. Access to
these cracks would lead to the void that was Nun. She embodies the primal womb
– where cycles of life, death and rebirth continues for all creatures and
beings. She is depicted as the one who have freed all creations to pursue their
individual life cycles making her “the Mother of all
Mothers
She was rarely described as
a personified deity, and is not often mentioned without her partner Nun although
she is sometimes described as the mother of the sun god along with the
composite deity Nun-Ptah.
In the old religious text
she is the underworld equivalent to heaven which the sun traverse during the
night.