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See also: Egyptian See also: god, if not of several distinct gods
.
To all forms of See also: Horus the falcon was sacred; the name Her, written with a See also: standing figure of that
See also: bird, is connected with a See also: root signifying " upper," and
probably means " the high-flyer." The tame sacred falcon on
its See also: perch is the commonest See also: symbol of divinity in early
hieroglyphic writing; the commonest title of the See also: king in the earliest dynasties, and his first title later, was that which named him Horus
.
Hawk gods were the presiding deities of Poi (Pe) and Nekhen, which had been the royal quarters in the capitals of the two primeval kingdoms of Upper and
See also: Lower See also: Egypt, at See also: Buto and opposite El Kab
.
A See also: principal festival in very early times
was the " worship of Horus," and the See also: kings of the prehistoric dynasties were afterwards called " the worshippers of Horus." The See also: Northern See also: Kingdom in particular was under the patronage of Horus
.
He was a solar divinity, but appears very early in the See also: Osiris See also: cycle of deities, a son of See also: Isis and probably of Osiris, and opponent of See also: Seth
.
On monuments of the See also: Middle Kingdom or somewhat later we find besides Her the following See also: special forms: Har-behtet, i.e
.
Her of Beht, the winged solar disk, god of See also: Edfu (Apollinopolis Magna); Har-khentekthai, god of Athribis; Har-mesen (whose principal sacred animal was a See also: lion), god of the Sethroite (?) See also: nome; Har-khentemna, i.e. the See also: blind (?) Horus (with a See also: shrew-See also: mouse) at Letopolis; Har-mert (" of two eyes ") at Pharbaethus; Har-akht, Ra-har-akht, or Har-m-akhi (HarlfRakhis, " See also: Hor of the See also: horizon "), the See also: sun-god of See also: Heliopolis
.
As a sun-god Horus not only worsted the hostile darkness and avenged his See also: father, but also daily renewed himself
.
He was thus identical with his own father from one point of view
.
In the See also: mythology, especially that of the New Kingdom, or of quite See also: late times, we find the following standing epithets applied to more or less distinct forms or phases: Harendotes (Har-ent-yotf), i.e
.
" Her, avenger of his father (Osiris) "; Harpokhrates (Har-p-khrat), i.e
.
" Her the See also: child," with See also: finger in mouth, sometimes seated on a See also: lotus-flower; Harsiesis (Har-si-Esi), i.e
.
" Her, son of Isis," as a child; Har-en-khebi, " Her in Chemmis," a child nursed by Isis in the See also: papyrus marshes; Haroeris (Har-uer), i.e
.
" the elder Her," at Ombos, &c., human-headed or falcon-headed; Harsemteus (Har-sem-teu), i.e
.
" Hor, uniter of the two lands," and others
.
In the See also: judgment scene Horus introduces the deceased to Osiris
.
To the Greeks Horus was See also: equivalent to See also: Apollo, but is the name of Hermopolis Parva (see See also: DAMANHUR), which must have been among the first of the Egyptian cities to be known to them, he was apparently identified with See also: Hermes
.
Although the falcon was the bird most properly sacred to Horus, not only its varieties, but also the sparrow-hawk, See also: kestrel and other small See also: hawks were mummified in his honour in late times
.
See EGYPT: section See also: Religion; See also: Meyer, See also: art
.
" Horos " in Rescher, See also: Lexicon der Griech. and Rom
.
Mythologie
.
(F
.
Li
.
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