Hyphenated goddesses
May. 31st, 2010 08:41 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I'm very curious about the identification of the Eye of Re with the Eye of Horus, and what this has to do with the identification of goddesses like Bastet and Wadjet. First stop: the Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen, a huge dictionary listing every deity name and giving their attestations. In German. It's very educational, especially when there are words like "Kopfschmuck" to be learned.
Anywho, the Lexikon lists numerous instances of Bastet being conflated with another goddess:
Bastet-Wadjet
Bastet-Wadjet-Shesmetet
Bastet-Unut
Bastet-Werethekau
Bastet-Menhit-Nebetuu
Bastet-Sekhmet
Bastet-Shesmetet
Bastet-Tefnut
ETA: Bastet-Sothis
And, amongst various titles:
Bastet, Eye of Horus
Not to mention:
Wadjet-Menhit
Wadjet-Sekhmet-Bastet
Menhit-Wadjet
Menhit-Bastet
Menhit-Sothis
Menhit-Sekhmet
Menhit-Sekhmet-Bastet
Menhit-Sekhmet-Bastet-Wadjet
Menhit-Tefnut
Mut-Wadjet
Mut-Wadjet-Werethekau
Mut-Wadjet-Sekhmet-Bastet
Sekhmet-Isis
Sekhmet-Bastet
Sekhmet-Bastet-Werethekau
Sekhmet-Bastet-Raet [aka Sekhmet-Bast-Ra, aka Mut - Book of the Dead Ch. 164]
Sekhmet-Bastet-Tefnut
Sekhmet-Mut
Sekhmet-Menhit
Sekhmet-Neith
Sekhmet-Nut
Sekhmet-Hathor
Sekhmet-Tefnut
And my favourite:
Mut-Wadjet-Bastet-Shesmetet-Menhit
ETA: Sekhmet-Wadjet appears in Chapter 23 of the Book of the Dead.
That gives me plenty to go on. But something I'm not clear on is how Egyptologists know to use a hyphen - that is, when the name is a conflation of the goddesses and when it isn't. Why is Mwt-Tm "the mother of Atum" and not "Mut-Atum"? Mostly the conflations are just long strings of names, but in some cases, such as Bastet-Sekhmet and Menhit-Neith, they're unmistakenly a single word, with all the determinatives coming together at the end instead of ending each individual name. And does the order of the names carry any meaning?
__
Leitz, Christian. Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen. Dudley, MA, Peeters, 2002-2003.
Anywho, the Lexikon lists numerous instances of Bastet being conflated with another goddess:
Bastet-Wadjet
Bastet-Wadjet-Shesmetet
Bastet-Unut
Bastet-Werethekau
Bastet-Menhit-Nebetuu
Bastet-Sekhmet
Bastet-Shesmetet
Bastet-Tefnut
ETA: Bastet-Sothis
And, amongst various titles:
Bastet, Eye of Horus
Not to mention:
Wadjet-Menhit
Wadjet-Sekhmet-Bastet
Menhit-Wadjet
Menhit-Bastet
Menhit-Sothis
Menhit-Sekhmet
Menhit-Sekhmet-Bastet
Menhit-Sekhmet-Bastet-Wadjet
Menhit-Tefnut
Mut-Wadjet
Mut-Wadjet-Werethekau
Mut-Wadjet-Sekhmet-Bastet
Sekhmet-Isis
Sekhmet-Bastet
Sekhmet-Bastet-Werethekau
Sekhmet-Bastet-Raet [aka Sekhmet-Bast-Ra, aka Mut - Book of the Dead Ch. 164]
Sekhmet-Bastet-Tefnut
Sekhmet-Mut
Sekhmet-Menhit
Sekhmet-Neith
Sekhmet-Nut
Sekhmet-Hathor
Sekhmet-Tefnut
And my favourite:
Mut-Wadjet-Bastet-Shesmetet-Menhit
ETA: Sekhmet-Wadjet appears in Chapter 23 of the Book of the Dead.
That gives me plenty to go on. But something I'm not clear on is how Egyptologists know to use a hyphen - that is, when the name is a conflation of the goddesses and when it isn't. Why is Mwt-Tm "the mother of Atum" and not "Mut-Atum"? Mostly the conflations are just long strings of names, but in some cases, such as Bastet-Sekhmet and Menhit-Neith, they're unmistakenly a single word, with all the determinatives coming together at the end instead of ending each individual name. And does the order of the names carry any meaning?
__
Leitz, Christian. Lexikon der ägyptischen Götter und Götterbezeichnungen. Dudley, MA, Peeters, 2002-2003.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-09 05:50 pm (UTC)I've just encountered the lioness-headed, ithyphallic, flail-brandishing, mummified diety seen at Hibis and possibly elsewhere. Blimey! Perhaps it's Mut
Mut would be my guess, the temple at Hibis being dedicated to Amun, Mut and Khonsu. And the ithyphallic/flail brandishing element is almost as strongly identified with Amun (especially Amun Kamutef) as it is with Min, with whom one tends immediately to associate it.
The mummiform bit, which again helps to identify this as a form of Mut, because Khonsu is frequently depicted as mummiform, is an interesting touch. When deities are mummiform, it doesn't have to do with the necropolis or afterlife per se--Ptah, e.g., has very few such associations and yet is frequently mummiform. Rather, it symbolizes ideality, perfection or completeness as such.
This aspect of being complete-in-oneself is reinforced by Mut's phallus, the potency by which she becomes "mother of her father", "the mother who became a daughter," et al., corresponding to Amun's epithet kamutef, "bull [stud] of his mother", i.e., his own begetter, one who possesses in himself the conditions of his own being.
Mind you, there's always the possibility of a self-fulfilling prophecy - cross-gender deities being rare because they're known to be rare.
This is true, though I would imagine that in most cases the orthography would tend to prevent a reading of what seems like, e.g., a verbal adjective with "-t" at the end really being a fused female divinity, but I'm not experienced enough at reading Egyptian primary texts "in the wild" without the crutch of an accompanying translation to say for certain. It's something I'm definitely going to keep in mind in future, though.
Sothis seems to have got around a bit!
Very much so. Since she embodies the beginning of the year, and hence the festival cycle through which the potencies of the Gods are expressed in time, she represents, as an aspect of another deity brought out in the fusion form (e.g., Bast-Sothis as the Sothis-aspect of Bast), the power of manifesting-all-divine-potencies-in-the-medium-of-worldly-time.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 05:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 04:08 pm (UTC)