Slavic gods. Report on the gods of ancient Greece Message on the history of the Egyptian god

        Even if the great space distinguished them..."
Homer "Odyssey"
Subject: “Gods in Ancient Greece.”
Reason The reason for writing the work was the desire to acquaint others with the ancient Greek gods - the main personifications of nature.
Relevance This topic has disappeared these days, only a few of us are interested in the gods of this ancient culture.
Purpose The abstract is to show the essence of famous gods and prove that these mythical creatures can be interesting.
Object of study- ancient Greek gods. These creatures can be called the embodiment of the forces of nature and the guardians of ancient sciences and arts. They are defenders of harmony and lawfulness in nature, punishing people for their misdeeds and sins.
Tasks:
    To uncover characteristics of gods and goddesses.
    Follow powerful forces present in the images of the supernatural beings in question.
    Define the role of gods in the life of man and the whole world.

Myth

What is a myth? In the “school understanding” these are, first of all, ancient, biblical and other ancient “fairy tales” about the creation of the world and man, as well as stories about the deeds of the ancients, mainly Greek and Roman gods and heroes - poetic, naive, often whimsical. The word “myth” itself is Greek and means tradition, legend. Up to the 19th century. In Europe, only ancient myths were the most widespread - stories of the ancient Greeks and Romans about their gods, heroes and other fantastic creatures. The names of ancient gods and heroes and stories about them became especially widely known since the Renaissance (15-16 centuries), when interest in antiquity revived in European countries. Around the same time, the first information about the myths of the Arabs and American Indians penetrated into Europe. In the educated environment of society, it became fashionable to use the names of ancient gods in an allegorical sense: when saying “Mars” they meant war, by “Venus” they meant love, by “Minerva” - wisdom, by “muses” - various sciences and arts. This usage has survived to this day, in particular in the poetic language, which has absorbed many mythological societies.
The variety of myths is very great. All of them are interesting in their own way, but the most famous are the ancient Greek myths. Consider the gods present in the mythology of Ancient Greece. Gods, as powerful supernatural beings, are the main characters in most myths in the so-called developed mythologies.
The myths of the ancient Greeks say: in the beginning there was nothing but eternal Chaos.
Chaos in Greek means “yawn”, “gaping”, “expanded space”, “abyss”. From it Gaia has already emerged - Earth, Tartarus, Eros, Night and Erebus - the fundamental principles of life. The Orphic poets brought Chaos closer to the world egg, the source of life. Late antiquity identifies CHAOS with Hades. Ovid represents Chaos as rough and formless matter, where land and air, heat and cold, hard and soft are mixed. Chaos is both a life-giving and destructive force. It is infinite in time and space. From Chaos also came the world and the immortal gods.

Gods and goddesses

Of course, there were quite a few gods and goddesses in Ancient Greece and it is not possible to count and consider them all, but you can get to know some of them. The first of the gods to reign was Uranus the sky.

Uranus

Uranus was the husband of Gaia, the goddess of the earth. Uranus gave birth to Gaia, and then, having married him, gave birth to the Cyclopes, Hecatoncheires and Titans. Uranus at first sight hated his children-monsters, imprisoned them in the bowels of the earth “and enjoyed his villainy.” Gaia was burdened by her time, and she persuaded the children to punish their father; for this she gave them a weapon - a sickle. The youngest of the children castrated his father with a sickle and imprisoned him in Tartarus. From the blood of Uranus, which poured onto the earth, giants, Erinnyes and shallows were born. Uranus and Gaia are the first, most ancient generation of gods. It was they who laid the foundation for the line of monsters with which later, classical gods and many generations of heroes had to fight.
The power from Uranus was taken away by his son Cronus, the same one who castrated and imprisoned his father in Tartarus. According to legend, the time of his reign was the Golden Age, when people did not know work and death.

Cron

Cronus or Kronos married his sister Rhea and, fearing his predicted fate of being overthrown by his son, he swallowed all his children. When the youngest son, Zeus, was born, Rhea deceived her husband and gave him a stone wrapped in a diaper to swallow, and Zeus hid it on the island of Crete. Having matured, Zeus forced Cronus to return all the children he had swallowed, giving him a magic drink, and he himself was overthrown and thrown into Tartarus.
The name Kronos is related to the Greek “chronos” - “time”. He is depicted with an ominous scythe in a crayfish - perhaps the sickle with which he committed an “unholy deed” on his father turned into it.
After the death of Cronus, a great struggle for power between the Titans and the Olympian gods took place. When the Olympians defeated the Titans, it meant the victory of the power of reason, order and harmony. Zeus, Hades and Poseidon are three brothers who shared supreme power over the world. Zeus inherited Olympus and began to be called Olympian, or Thessaolian, personifying only the bright, life-giving power. Hades settled in his underground possessions, and Poseidon received the sea as his inheritance, after which he settled in the underwater golden palace in Aegae, leaving Olympus.

Zeus and his wives

Zeus is a native Greek deity, his name means “bright sky”; His name is associated with the Greek words “life”, “irrigation”, “that through which everything exists”.
At first, Zeus was thought of as the ruler of both the living and the dead, he administered judgment over the dead and united in himself the beginning of life and death. This archaic deity was called Chthonius - underground and was worshiped in Carinth.
Zeus fears the fate of the overthrown Uranus and Cronus, and when Gaia foretells him the birth of a son stronger than he, he swallows his first wife Metis (a wise goddess, her name means “thought”) to prevent this from happening. Metis, absorbed by Zeus, gives him advice and helps him distinguish between evil and good.
After Metis, Zeus married the goddess of justice, Themis. Themis is an ancient powerful deity, sometimes she is thought of as Mother Gaia, the keeper of ancient wisdom and prophetic gifts. In classical mythology, Themis is no longer identified with the earth. She forever remained an adviser to Zeus, sits at the foot of the Olympian throne and conducts conversations with him.
The third - and last - legal wife of Zeus is Hera. The name Hera means “mistress”, “guardian”. Before the battle with the Titans, the mother hid Hera at the edge of the earth, near the Ocean and Tethys. There Zeus found her and, passionately falling in love, made her his legal wife. Hera is an older deity than Zeus. In her character there are traces of archaic, elemental, unreasonable force. She tries to defend her independence in front of her husband, they often argue with each other, Hera has her own likes and interests. Hera is the patroness of marriage and family. She is jealous of the polygamist Zeus and pursues his lovers. This goddess is touchy and vindictive. She gave birth to Zeus Hebe, the goddess of youth, Ilithyia, the patroness of women in childbirth, and the god of war, Ares.
Marriages of Zeus bring harmony and reasonable beauty into the world. The goddess Themis gave birth to mountains from Zeus - the goddess of the change of seasons, regularity and order, and Moira - the goddess of fate. The goddess Mnemosyne, one of Zeus's beloved, gave birth to ten muses - patroness of the arts and sciences. The oceanid Eurynome gave birth to the shining Charite, personifying joy, beauty and fun, the meek Leto - the formidable and beautiful Apollo and the hunter-goddess Artemis. The wise Athena and, according to some versions, Aphrodite were born from Zeus. Mortal women gave birth to Zeus: heroic conquerors of ancient monsters, sages and founders of cities.
Unlike the insidious, violent and unbridled gods of previous generations, Zeus stands guard over law and order. He himself submits to the judgments of the Moira. The dictates of fate are hidden from him; to recognize them, he weighs the lot on golden scales, and if the lot of death falls even to his son, he does not dare to interfere with this. Therefore, he strictly punishes all violations of the law - whether the violators are gods or mortals.
Zeus fights evil, punishing individual “schemers” like Tantalus or Sisyphus, and carries out generational curses over entire generations of people.
Possessing the power and authority of an ancient primitive deity, Zeus protects morality and law - the foundations of ancient statehood. He is the patron of orphans, those who pray, and travelers.
Zeus is also revered as the guardian of the family and clan. He was called “father”, “all-begetter”, “fatherly”, “ancestral”; wars prayed to him for victory, addressing Zeus: “warrior,” “bearer of victory,” and the sculptor Phidias sculpted Zeus holding in his hand a figurine of the goddess Nike. In a word, Zeus is generally the protector of the Hellenes.
In more ancient myths, the elemental power of Zeus is brought to the fore.
The attributes of the supreme god are an aegis, a scepter, and sometimes a hammer. The sanctuaries of Zeus were located in Dodona and Olympia. In Olympia, in honor of this deity, the famous Olympic Games were held every four years, during which all wars in Greece stopped.
Cult statues of Zeus have been preserved, where he is depicted sitting on a throne with his attributes of power. The ancient sculpture “Zeus Otricoli”, numerous reliefs of the Parthenon and the Pergamon Altar, depicting Zeus among the Olympians, the battle of Zeus with the giants and the birth of Athena from his head, have reached us.

Hades
Hades is the god of the underworld. The ancient Greeks imagined the afterlife as gloomy and terrible, and life in it seemed to them full of suffering and misfortune. Ethereal shadows swept across the gloomy fields of the underworld, emitting quiet, pitiful groans. The river Lethe carried its waters to the kingdom of Hades, giving oblivion to everything that comes to earth. The stern Charon transported the souls of the dead to the other side of the River Styx, from where there was no return for anyone.
The golden throne of Hades was surrounded by terrible, gloomy creatures.
No sacrifices are made to Hades, he has no children, and he even obtained his wife illegally and by cunning. Having given her a pomegranate seed to swallow, he forced her to return to him for at least a third of the year. According to Pausanias, Hades was revered only in Elis, where once a year his temple was opened and the priests of Hades entered there. The name Hades means "invisible", "formless", "terrible".
Perhaps the only good creature who lived in the kingdom of the underground god was the god of sleep, Hypnos.
Hypnos is the son of Night and the brother of Death - Tanat, as well as the Moirai and Nemesis. Hypnos, unlike Tanat, is a calm and favorable deity towards people. He silently flew everywhere on his transparent wings and poured a sleeping pill from his horn. As soon as this god gently touched human eyes with his magic wand, people immediately fell into a deep, sweet sleep. Even the great Zeus was unable to resist Hypnos.

Poseidon

Poseidon is one of the main Olympic gods, the ruler of the sea. His wife, the Nereid Amphitrite, gave birth to his son Triton, the god of the deep sea. Poseidon rushes across the sea in a chariot drawn by long-maned horses and measures the waves with his trident.
In the ancient beliefs of the Greeks, Poseidon is associated with the earth - after all, it is water that makes the earth fertile. This is indicated by his epithets “landlord”, “shaker of the earth”, and the legends in which he carved a source of water from the ground with his trident, and his embodiment in earthly animals - a bull and a horse.
As befits an ancient deity, Poseidon is vindictive, vindictive, and violent. He considers himself equal to his brother Zeus and sometimes openly quarrels with him.
The children of Poseidon were also distinguished by their savagery and elemental, monstrous strength.
These are the violent and daring giants Sarpedon, Orion and the Aload brothers; the king of the Bebriks, the strong son of the earth Antaeus, the wild and gloomy cannibal Polyphemus, the king Busiris, who kills strangers, the robbers Kerkion and Skiron. From the gorgon Medusa, Poseidon had the warrior Chrysaor and the winged horse Pegasus, from Demeter the horse Areion, a monstrous minotaur born of Pasiphae, also the son of Poseidon.
The mythical Scheria is the only country where the descendants of Poseidon lived happily and serenely, reigning over a people of skilled sailors loved by the gods. Atlantis, where the descendants of Poseidon also reigned, was punished by Zeus for impiety.
Poseidon was revered as the deity of the sea and springs. Black animals were usually sacrificed to the “black-haired” and “blue-haired”, which indicates his connection with underground, chthonic forces. Sacrifices were made to Poseidon in case of disasters sent by God and were supposed to soften his anger.

Apollo

Apollo was born on the island of Desol. About to be relieved of her burden, Leto wandered for a long time, pursued by the wrath of the jealous Hera and the serpent Python sent by her. Only the floating island of Asteria, deserted and rocky, finally gave her shelter. There, under a palm tree, Leto gave birth to twins - Artemis and Apollo, and from that moment the island firmly rooted itself to the seabed and began to be called Delos, which means “I manifest.” The island that revealed the bright god to the world became sacred, the palm tree became the sacred tree of Apollo, and the swan became the sacred bird, for the swans sang seven times in honor of the birth of Apollo; That’s why there are seven strings on his cithara.
Having been born, Apollo demanded a bow and a lyre and wanted to prophesy the will of his father Zeus. “The God of Light,” Apollo draws closer to the sun, which is both destructive and healing. He can save the people from the plague, he is a protector and a doctor and has power over all healing herbs. A healing panacea flows from his hair, protecting against illness. His son Asclepius is a healer so skillful that he brings the dead back to life.
According to legend, for this Zeus struck Asclepius with lightning, Apollo killed the Cyclopes who bound this lightning, and as punishment he had to serve on earth for a year with King Admetus. It was then, while tending Admetus’ flock, that he received the nickname “shepherd god”, “guardian of the flocks”. Admetus remembered that his shepherd was an immortal god, revered and worshiped him, and the king’s flocks flourished. As a sign of friendship, Apollo promised Admetus to delay his death if one of his relatives agreed to go to Hades in his place.
In general, Apollo’s love and friendship rarely turned out to be beneficial over mortals. His favorite, the young Cypress, died; mourning the death of a beloved deer: the gods turned him into a tree of sorrow. Young Hyakinthos was accidentally killed by Apollo himself while throwing a discus. From the blood of a young man he grew a beautiful flower.
Apollo received the gift of divination as soon as he was born, but according to other legends, things were different. After defeating Python, Apollo had to cleanse himself of the filth of the spilled blood and for this he descended to Hades. There, having atoned for his guilt before the Earth, which gave birth to Python, he gained prophetic power. In Delphi, at the foot of Parnassus, where he killed the monstrous serpent, the god founded his temple. He himself brought the first Cretan seafaring priests there and taught them to sing the peanghym in honor of Apollo. The Delphic Temple, where the Pythia sat on a tripod and announced the future, is the main sanctuary of Apollo. The Delphic oracle, along with the sacred oak in Dodona, where the sanctuary of Zeus was, are the most authoritative soothsayers of Greece. With her mysterious predictions, Pythia seriously influenced the politics of Greek ideas. From Apollo came a line of soothsayers.
As a child, Apollo amused himself by building cities from the antlers of deer killed by Artemis. From then on, he fell in love with city building. This god taught people to mark out the land, build altars and erect walls.
With all the variety of his roles, Apollo is best known as a patron of the arts. He is a musician, kifared (plays the cithara) and musaged (leads round dances of muses). From this a race of singers and musicians came to earth. His sons are Orpheus and Liin. He is the organizer of world harmony, world harmony. Under the patronage of Apollo, the mythical country of the Hyperboreans, a blessed people, flourishes, spending their days in fun, dancing and singing to music, in feasts and prayers.

Ares
Ares is the god of war. According to legend, he was born in Thrace, inhabited in the view of the Greeks by wild, warlike barbarians. Ares is bloodthirsty, violent, loves murder and destruction. At first, Ares was simply identified with war and deadly weapons. He is hated by both people and gods. On Olympus, only Aphrodite burns with passion for him, and Zeus curses Ares and threatens that he would throw him into Tartarus if he were not his son.
Ares is a formidable warrior, his epithets are “strong”, “huge”, “treacherous”, “fast”, “furious”, “destroyer of cities”. The same savagery and violent belligerence is visible in the children of Ares. This is the Thracian king Diomedes, who fed travelers to his horses, the heroes Meleager, Ascalafus, the cruel king Oenomaus, the wicked Phlegias, the tribe of Amazons. In alliance with one of the Erinnia, Ares gave birth to the Theban dragon, from whose teeth grew the warlike Spartans - Jason had to fight them in Colchis, where he arrived for the Golden Fleece. For Cadmus, who killed this dragon, many generations of his descendants - the Theban kings - later paid with troubles.
Ares' companions - the goddess of discord Eris and the frantic Enyo - confusion; the horses in his chariot are Shine, Flame, Noise, Terror.
Ares had to endure insults not only from the gods, but also from mortals. The Aloads chained him and kept him in a copper jug ​​for thirteen months - without the help of Hermes he would not have escaped there. The mortal Diomedes wounded Ares with a spear. During the war with Pylos, Hercules put Ares to flight. But for all his hardships, Ares is rewarded by the love of the most beautiful of goddesses, Aphrodite. From their union were born Phobos, Deimos, Eros and Anteros, as well as a daughter, Harmony.

Helios
Helios is the sun god, who gives life to all living things and punishes criminals with blindness and death. Son of the titans Hyperion and Theia, brother of Selene and Eos.
In a halo of blinding rays, with terrible burning eyes in a golden helmet and on a golden chariot, the Sun God walks his daily path across the sky. From above he sees all the affairs of people and gods, even those that are hidden from the eyes of other celestials.
Helios lives in a golden palace with silver forged gates. His throne of precious stones is surrounded by the four seasons, and flanked by Hours, Days, Months, Years and Centuries. It was to this palace that Phaeton came to his father with an unreasonable request - to ride in his golden crown and on his fiery horses. But he could not hold on to the divine horses and fell into the sea. After the death of Phaeton, the day passed without sun - Helios mourned his son.
On the island of Trinacria, the herds of Helios graze - seven herds of bulls and seven herds of rams, each with fifty heads, and their number is always the same. These herds symbolize the fifty seven-day weeks that make up the year of the ancient Greeks, and the bulls and rams represent days and nights. Odysseus's companions encroached on the sacred bulls, for which Zeus, at the request of Helios, threw lightning at them and sank them along with the ship.
The descendants of the Sun God were distinguished by their insolence and malevolence, as well as their penchant for sorcery, like Kioka and Medea.
Helios was often identified with his father, the titan Hyperion, and in late antiquity with the Olympian Apollo.

Dionysus

Dionysus is the god of vegetation, viticulture and winemaking. According to the main myth, Dionysus is the son of Zeus and the Theban princess Semele.
Because of the machinations of the jealous Hera, Zeus had to appear to Semele in all his Olympian grandeur and Semele died in the flames of lightning. Zeus sewed the baby born prematurely into his thigh and gave birth again three months later. Therefore, Dionysus is called “twice-born,” and sometimes, meaning Zagreus (the predecessor of Dionysus), “thrice-born.” Zeus gave his son to be raised by the Nisean nymphs.
When Dionysus grew up and found the vine, Hera made him mad. Seized by a frenzy, he wandered through Egypt and Syria until he came to Phrygia, where Rhea-Cybele healed him and introduced him to her mysteries. From there Dionysus went to India, establishing the cult of the grapevine along the way. The procession of Bacchus was accompanied by riots and destruction. Naturally, many did not like these bacchanalian orgies and Dionysus often met resistance. He was declared an impostor, and then Dionysus revealed himself in the form of a god.
The names of Dionysus are Bromius (“noisy”), Liaeus (“liberator”), Lenaeus (“sower of grapes”), Evius (“ivy”), Sabazius, Liber, Bassareus. His attributes are a thyrsus (a rod entwined with ivy) and a cup. Myths about Dionysus are reflected in ancient fine art.

Hermes

Hermes is the messenger of the gods, the patron of travelers, the guide of the souls of the dead. Hermes is an Olympian god, the son of Zeus and Myne, daughter of Atlas, born in Arcadia, in the cave of Killene. Its antiquity is indicated by its name, which may have come from the word “herma” - a pile of stones. Such herms marked burial places, they were road signs, and marked boundaries. The destruction of herms in Greece was punishable as sacrilege.
Having been born, the baby Hermes immediately stole a herd of cows belonging to Apollo. Despite all his cunning precautions, the prophetic Apollo guessed who the kidnapper was, but in response to his demands, the “innocent baby” only wrapped himself in swaddling clothes. When Apollo dragged Hermes to Zeus for trial, he continued to deny it, swearing that he had not seen any cows and did not even know what they were. Zeus laughed and ordered the herd to be returned to Apollo. Hermes gave the cows to the owner, but began to play so beautifully on the lyre, which that same morning he made from the shell of a turtle he had caught, that Apollo began to beg him to exchange the lyre for the herd. Hermes received the cows back, and instead of the lyre he made himself a pipe, which he also gave to Apollo in exchange for his golden rod. In addition, Apollo promised to teach him fortune telling. Thus, as soon as he was born, Hermes appeared in the world in all the diversity of his roles.
Clever rogues, eloquent liars and thieves pray to Hermes.
Hermes is the patron saint of travelers, wanderers, he is a guide, he opens any doors. Hermes leads the goddesses to trial before Paris; he delivers Priam to Achilles’ tent, leading him invisibly through the entire Achaean camp. Fleet-footed Hermes serves as a messenger for the Olympians, communicating the divine will to mortals.
Hermes is a guide not only on earth and Olympus, but also in the kingdom of Hades. He accompanies the souls of the dead to Erebus.
A side function of Hermes, which he shared with Hecate, is the protection provided to the shepherds and the multiplication of the offspring of the herd. His son Pan is the god of flocks. Hermes was revered at anthesteria - the festival of the awakening of spring and the memory of the dead.
His attributes are golden winged sandals and a staff.

Hephaestus
Hephaestus is the god of fire and blacksmithing, son of Hera. After the birth of Athena, Hera wished, like Zeus, to give birth to a child on her own without the participation of her husband - and was resolved by Hephes. The baby turned out to be frail and ugly, and Hera threw him from Olympus, which is why he later began to limp on one leg. Hephaestus was picked up from the sea by Thetis and Eurynome and raised in a cave on the ocean shore. He forever remained grateful to his adoptive mothers, and Hera took revenge - he forged her a trap chair, from which she could not get up until the Olympians persuaded Hephaestus to forgive his mother. Later, Hephaestus even protected Hera from the wrath of Zeus - and paid for it: now Zeus threw him off Olympus. Since then, Hephaestus limped on both legs.
Hephaestus was famous on Olympus as a skilled blacksmith and artist: he built palaces of copper and gold for the gods, forged immortal weapons and the famous shield of Achilles, the crown of Pandora and the bedchamber of Hera.
On Olympus, the good-natured and clumsy Hephaestus entertains the gods with jokes, treats them with nectars and generally plays a certain service role.
Hephaestus is the personification of fire, close to the elemental forces of nature.

Asclepius

Asclepius is the god of healing. When Apollo struck Coronis with an arrow for treason, he soon regretted what he had done and, unable to resurrect his beloved, already on the funeral pyre tore from her womb the baby she was carrying. Apollo gave his son to be raised by the intelligent centaur Chiron, who taught the young man the art of healing so much that he began to be worshiped as a god. But when Asclepius began to resurrect the dead with his art and thereby violated the laws of fate, Zeus incinerated him with his lightning. According to some versions, Asclepius was later resurrected by Zeus and placed among the stars.
Asclepius was revered throughout Greece, especially in Epidaurus, where the sick flocked from everywhere for healing. The obligatory attribute of Asclepius was a snake, and with it he dwells among the constellations. The most famous sanctuary of Asclepius is located on the island of Kos. The doctors of this island were famous for their art and were considered the descendants of Asclepius - asclepides.

Prometheus

Prometheus is the son of the Titan Iapetus (Iapetus), cousin of Zeus; known as a god-fighter who betrayed the gods and helped people. Prometheus's mother is the oceanid Clymene (or Asia). In Aeschylus, however, Prometheus calls the goddess of justice Themis his mother, identifying her with Gaia - the Earth. The name Prometheus means “seer”, “foreseeer”. Endowed with the gift of clairvoyance from Mother Earth, Prometheus in the battle of the Titans with the Olympians foresaw the victory of wisdom, not strength. His rude and narrow-minded relatives, the titans, did not listen to his advice, and Prometheus went over to the side of Zeus. With the help of Prometheus, Zeus dealt with the Titans.
According to one legend, He Himself created people from clay - and also created them, unlike animals, looking up into the sky. Prometheus taught people crafts, customs, agriculture, building houses and ships, reading, writing and fortune-telling - all human arts from Prometheus. Thus, he led people along the path of technical progress, which Zeus did not like very much - after all, people, having learned to ease the hardships of life, became proud and spoiled. But Zeus did not correct people, and to top off his evil he created Pandora.
etc.................

In Ancient Egypt there were a very large number of gods. Each city had its own pantheon or Ennead– 9 main deities that people worshiped. However, for the first time such an ennead appeared in the city of Heliopolis (Heliopolis). It has been known since the times of the Early Kingdom, that is, from the origins of Egyptian civilization.

The priests who lived in this city were considered the most influential and powerful. It was they who named the very first nine deities. Therefore, it is believed that the main gods of Ancient Egypt originated in Heliopolis, and the pantheon itself began to be called Heliopolis or great ennead. Below is a list of the supreme deities and a brief description of them.

God Ra

This is the supreme ancient Egyptian deity. It personified the sun. After the creation of the world, Ra began to reign over it, and this was the most fertile time for people. The power of God lay in his mysterious name. Other celestials wanted to know this name in order to gain the same power, but the sun god did not tell it to anyone.

A lot of time passed, and Ra grew old. He lost his vigilance and told his mysterious name to his great-granddaughter Isis. After this, a period of chaos ensued, and people stopped obeying the supreme deity. Then the sun god decided to leave the earth and go to heaven.

But he did not forget people and continued to take care of them. Every morning he boarded a boat called Atet, and the sun's disk shone above his head. In this boat, Ra sailed across the sky and illuminated the earth from dawn to noon. Then, between noon and twilight, he transferred to another boat called Sektet and went in it to the underworld to illuminate the ordeals of the afterlife.

In this mournful place, the sun god met every night with the huge serpent Apep, who personified evil and darkness. A battle began between Ra and the serpent, and the sun god was always the winner. But by the next night evil and darkness were reborn again, and the battle was repeated again.

The ancient Egyptians depicted the god Ra with the body of a man and the head of a falcon, which was crowned with a solar disk. On it lay the goddess Wajit in the form of a cobra. She was considered the patroness of Lower Egypt and its pharaohs. This god had other names in some religious centers. In Thebes he was called Amun-Ra, in Elephantine Khnum-Ra. But this did not change the main essence of the solar deity, who had the status of the main god of Ancient Egypt.

God Shu

This deity personified the air space illuminated by the sun. Shu was the son of Ra, and when he ascended to heaven, he began to reign in his place. He ruled the sky, the earth, the mountains, the winds, the seas. After thousands of years, Shu also ascended to heaven. In terms of status he was considered second after Ra.

In some images he was shown as a man with the head of a lion. He sat on a throne carried by lions. But there are many more images of the god of air in the form of an ordinary person with a feather in his head. It symbolized the goddess of truth Maat.

Goddess Tefnut

This deity also belonged to the main gods of Ancient Egypt. Tefnut is the goddess of heat and moisture. She was the daughter of the god Ra and was the wife of Shu’s brother. The husband and wife were twins. But even before marriage, the god Ra sent his daughter to Nubia, having quarreled with her, and a drought occurred in Egypt. Then the sun god returned his daughter, and she married Shu.

The return of Tefnut and her marriage became a symbol of the blossoming of nature. Most often, the goddess was depicted as a man with the head of a lioness and a fiery disk above her head. The disk indicated her connection with her father Ra, since the daughter was considered his fiery eye. When the sun god appeared early in the morning on the horizon, a fiery eye shone in his forehead and burned all enemies and ill-wishers.

God Geb

Geb is the god of the earth, the son of Shu and Tefnut. He married his sister Nut - the goddess of the sky - and this couple had children: Osiris, Isis, Set, Nephthys. It is noteworthy that Geb constantly quarreled with Nut, who ate her children - the heavenly bodies - before dawn, but gave birth to them again on the eve of twilight.

These quarrels tired Shu's father, and he separated the spouses. He raised the chickpeas high into the sky, and left Hebe on the ground. He reigned after his father, and then transferred his power to his son Osiris. He was most often depicted as a green man sitting on a throne with a royal crown on his head.

Goddess Nut

Nut is the goddess of the sky, daughter of Shu and Tefnut, sister and wife of Geb. She was the mother of Osiris, Isis, Set and Nephthys. In the morning, the goddess of the sky swallowed the stars, and in the late evening she gave birth to them, thereby symbolizing the change of day and night. She had an inextricable connection with the world of the dead.

She raised the dead into the sky and guarded the tombs of the dead. She was depicted as a woman with a curved body. It stretched across the horizon and touched the ground with the tips of his fingers and toes. Often, under the curved body of Nut, Geb was depicted lying on the ground.

It must be said that the main gods of Ancient Egypt would have lost a lot without Osiris. He was the great-great-grandson of the god Ra and ruled the earth after his father Geb. During his reign he taught people many useful things. He married his own sister Isis, and Seth and Nephthys were his brother and sister. But Seth, who lived in the desert in the south of Egypt, began to envy his successful brother, killed him and usurped royal power for himself.

Set not only killed, but dismembered the body of Osiris into 14 pieces and scattered them throughout the lands of Egypt. But the faithful wife Isis found all the pieces, put them together and called a guide to the underground kingdom of Anubis. He made a mummy from the body of Osiris, which became the first in Egypt. After this, Isis turned into a female kite, spread herself over the body of her husband and brother and became pregnant by him. Thus was born Horus, who became the last of the gods to rule the earth. After him, power passed to the pharaohs.

Horus defeated Set, sent him back south to the desert, and revived his father with the help of his left eye. After this, he remained to rule on earth, and Osiris began to reign in the afterlife. The god was depicted as a man in white robes and with a green face. In his hands he held a flail and a scepter, and his head was crowned.

Isis (Isis) was extremely popular in Ancient Egypt, considered the goddess of fertility, symbolizing motherhood and femininity. She was the wife of Osiris and the mother of Horus. The Egyptians believed that the Nile flooded when Isis cried, mourning Osiris, who left her and went to rule the kingdom of the dead.

The importance of this goddess increased significantly during the Middle Kingdom, when funerary texts began to be used not only by the pharaohs and members of their families, but also by all other inhabitants of Egypt. Isis was depicted as a man with a throne on his head, who personified the power of the pharaohs.

Seth (Seth) is the youngest son of Geb and Nut, brother of Osiris, Isis and Nephthys. He married the latter. He was born on the third New Year's day, jumping out of his mother's side. The ancient Egyptians considered this day unlucky, therefore, until the day ended, they did not do anything. Set was considered the god of war, chaos and sandstorms. He personified evil, which made him similar to Satan. Having killed Osiris, he reigned on earth for a short time until he was overthrown by Horus. After that, he ended up in the desert in southern Egypt, from where he sent sandstorms to fertile lands.

Seth was depicted as a man with the head of an aardvark or a donkey. He had long ears and in many depictions a red mane. Sometimes this god was given red eyes. This color symbolized desert sand and death. The pig was considered the sacred animal of the god of sandstorms. Therefore, pigs were classified as unclean animals.

The youngest of the children of Geb and Nut, named Nephthys, also belonged to the main gods of Ancient Egypt. She was born on the last day of the year. The ancient Egyptians viewed this goddess as a complement to Isis. She was considered the goddess of creation, which permeates the entire world. Nephthys ruled over everything ephemeral that could not be seen, touched or smelled. She had a connection with the world of the dead, and at night she accompanied Ra on his voyage through the underworld.

She was considered Seth's wife, but did not have the pronounced negative traits characteristic of her husband. This goddess was depicted in a human female form. Her head was crowned with a hieroglyph indicating the name of the goddess. On sarcophagi she was depicted as a woman with wings, symbolizing the protector of the dead.

The ancients lived in close connection with nature. It is not surprising that the Sun, the giver of life, was the central object of their worship. In the cults of different parts of the world, the solar gods were deeply revered and exalted. They were placated with offerings, holidays were held in their honor and they were asked for protection.

God Ra - protector from the forces of darkness

In Egyptian myths, the sun god Ra is the father and ruler of the world. During the day, sailing along the celestial Nile, Ra carefully sends his warmth to the earth. And when night comes, he goes to the afterlife, where he fights the encroaching darkness, illuminating the underworld. All night Ra fights the forces of darkness. In the underground kingdom, he meets his main enemy - the serpent Apophis, who is trying to swallow the Sun so that the world plunges into eternal darkness. By morning, Ra kills Apophis, and with this comes dawn.

God Ra sails on his boat along the supercelestial Ocean of the goddess Nut

world creation

According to myths, the god Amon-Ra, as he was also called during the New Kingdom, has always existed. Long before the creation of the world, he lived in the space of the Nun Ocean, which the ancient Egyptians likened to an egg. The sun god marked his exit beyond Nun with an act of creation.

According to myth, the god Amun-Ra emerged from the abyss of Nun and created light by his own will alone. Then he created wind and moisture from himself, and from them came the earth and sky. This is how the four elements appeared in the images of two divine couples: Shu and Tefnut, Hebe and Nut. It was believed that the god Amun-Ra and his descendants were the first pharaohs of Egypt.

The Earth God Geb (below) and the Sky Goddess Nut (above). Papyrus.

Symbolic image of Ra

The sun god Ra was depicted with a falcon's head crowned with a red disk. In one hand he holds an ankh - an Egyptian cross symbolizing eternal life and rebirth; in the other - a scepter - a symbol of divine power. Also in Egyptian mythology, Ra sometimes takes the form of a phoenix rising from the ashes. Like a fiery bird, in the evening Ra fades away in the west, only to be reborn in the east in the morning.

The solar disk above the head of the god Ra is his fiery Eye of retribution. The Eye of Ra protects him from numerous enemies and subjugates the rebellious to its will. The Eye of Ra is also the personification of the destructive side of fire and a reminder of the dual nature of things. The creative power of light can turn into scorching rays of heat. And what was previously the source of life will become the cause of death.

One day, when the god Ra was already very old, people stopped obeying him. And angry with the people, he turned his sunny Eye into the fierce lioness Sekhmet. In the name of retribution, Sekhmet began to furiously destroy everything in her path, beating and killing people. Seeing this, Ra was horrified and decided to stop Sekhmet by deception by giving her beer colored the color of blood.

Bas-relief depicting Isis (right) and Sekhmet (left)

The Sun God Ra appears in ancient myths in the form of his various forms. Ra himself is the daytime Sun. The Evening Sun was called Atum, which also corresponds to the name of the more archaic god Atum, who was popular in earlier times in Egypt. The Morning Sun was called Khepri, which means “scarab” - an ancient symbol of rebirth. And in the battle with the serpent Apophis, the god Ra fights in the form of a fiery red cat.

God Ra in the form of a cat defeats the snake Apophis (right). Papyrus Ani

The departure of the god Ra from the human world

According to the myths of ancient Egypt, upset by the disobedience of people, the sun god Ra decided to leave the earthly world. Having learned about this, people repented and came to see Ra off. They gave him their word to fight his enemies and honor his memory. After this, Ra climbed onto the back of the Heavenly Cow to continue to rule the world from there. And earthly power passed into the hands of his children.

Ancient Egyptian religion is a system of beliefs and rituals that were an integral part of the life of the ancient Egyptians. Their beliefs and rituals were based on the worship of gods and goddesses who represented natural phenomena and forces. The Egyptians made offerings to their deities because they believed that this helped maintain the divine order: truth, justice, harmony, morality. The pharaoh was considered the representative of the gods. He was empowered to oversee the maintenance of divine order.

The characteristics of the Egyptian gods were expressed in myths and art. The gods had their own hierarchy and different relationships with each other. The supreme deity, according to the Egyptians, was the creator of the world. It was believed that gods were present in all spheres of people’s lives and were able to influence the course and order of things in human life. The relationship of people with their gods was a fundamental part of Egyptian society. They prayed, appealed to their action, asked for advice, performed rituals and offerings. According to Egyptologists (scientists who study ancient Egyptian history), there were about 1,500 deities.

Main gods

Amon was represented in human form, sometimes with the head of a ram. His name meant "hidden". He was the supreme deity, the sun god, and patron of the city of Thebes.

Apis was considered the god of fertility, depicted as a bull with a sun disk, the patron saint of Memphis. Of all the animal deities, the bull was the most respected.

Astarte, the goddess of fertility and love, symbolized feminine qualities.

Aten is a god who personified the solar disk. During the time of Pharaoh Amenhotep IV, he was recognized as a single deity throughout Egypt. Also at this time it was forbidden to worship other gods.

Anubis is a god with a human body and the head of a jackal. It was believed that Anubis escorted the dead to another world.

Geb is the son of the god of air, the god of earth. It was believed that water comes from this deity and all the plants that people need grow on it. He also protected people from snakes.

Horus is a god with a human body and a falcon's head, the patron of the sky and the sun.

Isis is the goddess of motherhood, one of the main goddesses of the Egyptian pantheon of gods. She was the patroness of slaves and the oppressed.

Osiris was a judge in the afterlife. He was the god of natural forces and the world of the dead. It was believed that it was Osiris who taught man the arts, agriculture and sciences.

Option 2

The ancient Egyptians worshiped a huge number of ancient Egyptian gods and goddesses. Some of them looked very human; however, others were composed of human and animal parts. Therefore, some Egyptian gods looked like crocodiles, jackals, cats, rams and even falcons.

The bodies of these ancient gods were always human, but their heads could be parts of birds and animals.

Although most religions now worship only one god, the ancient Egyptians worshiped many gods. This phenomenon is called polytheism.

The religious beliefs of the ancient Egyptians were based on an extraordinary number of ancient Egyptian gods and Egyptian goddesses. The characteristics and appearance of some ancient deities closely resembled humans. However, some of the deities were perceived as “human hybrids”, taking on the form and characteristics of animals such as the crocodile, jackal, and falcon. The bodies of these ancient deities were human, but their heads looked like those of birds or animals.

Basic ancientsegyptian gods

Ra was the sun god and head of the ancient Egyptian divine pantheon. Ra was depicted as a man with the head of a hawk and a headdress in the form of a solar disk. At some point, Ra was combined with another god, Amun, to create the even more powerful god Amon-Ra. This was one of the first religious reforms in the history of human civilization, when Pharaoh Amenhotep decided to abolish the entire pantheon of ancient Egyptian gods and worship only the god Amun-Ra. Ra was believed to have created all forms of life and was the supreme ruler of the gods.

Osiris was also one of the main ancient deities, whose role was in the leadership of the underworld. He was the judge of the dead.

Set was the personification of Egyptian evil and darkness. This god was the most terrible among the ancient Egyptian gods, since he killed his brother Osiris.

Ancient Egyptian goddess Isis, the mother goddess, was the wife of Osiris and the mother of Horus, who assisted in the resurrection of Osiris.

One of the most famous deities, the patron of the animal kingdom, was a half-ibis god That. He also patronized scribes, writers and scientists and inventors of hieroglyphs.

Anubis, the jackal god was perhaps one of the most famous ancient deities, as he was the god of the dead, in charge of tombs and embalming.

Another of the famous half-animal gods was the god of strength and power Sobek, half crocodile.

Magic surrounded the Egyptian gods, and Hake and was the god of magic and medicine. Heka was the son Khnuma, god of fertility.

The scarab was a significant symbol in ancient Egypt, and one of the deities Khepri, was depicted with the head of a scarab.

Many pharaohs built large temples in honor of the gods whom they considered their patrons. These temples had large statues of deities and the pharaoh, gardens, altars and places of worship. Each city had temples to the patron gods of that particular city.

Some famous temples include the Temple of Luxor, the Temple of Isis at Philae, the Temple of Horus and Edfu, the Temples of Ramsay and Nefertiti at Abu Simbel, and the Temple of Amun at Karnak.

The ancient Egyptians considered the pharaoh their main intermediary between them and the gods. The pharaoh was considered more important than the priests in the temples. At the same time, people believed that the pharaoh was so closely connected with the god Horus that he could sometimes take his form. Later, the pharaohs established among the people the belief that they were the children of the gods.

The ancient Egyptians believed that there was an afterlife after death. They thought that humans had two important components of soul and body: "ka" or life force, which represented the body, and "ba", which was more like the soul. If “ka” and “ba” can be combined in the afterlife, then the person will exist in the afterlife. A key component of this was preserving the body for the afterlife. This is why the Egyptians used embalming or mummification to preserve the dead. But this was not a cheap pleasure and only wealthy people could afford it. To preserve their embalmed bodies, the pharaohs built huge pyramid tombs. The pyramid of Pharaoh Cheops is the only surviving wonder of the world in the modern world.



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