And here's a catch-all for Mafdet. :) To start off with:
Some links, parked here for later reference:
Mafdet at Henadology
Etymological dictionary of Egyptian
- Lichtheim, Miriam. Ancient Egyptian Literature. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1973-80.
Pyramid Texts, Utterance 295: "Mafdet leaps at the neck of the in-di.f-snake, she does it again at the neck of the serpent with raised head. Who is he who will survive? It is I who will survive." (Footnote: "Mafdet here appears in the role of a mongoose.")
Pyramid Texts, Utterance 297: "My hand has come upon you, the avenger (?) is this which has come upon you, (even) Mafdet, pre-eminent in the Mansion of Life; she strikes you on your face, she scratches you on your eyes, so that you fall into your faeces and crawl into your urine. Fall! Lie down! Crawl away, for your mother Nut sees you!"
Pyramid Texts, Utterance 298: "Re arises, his uraeus is upon him, against this snake which came forth from the earth and which is under my fingers. He will cut off your (sic) head with this knife which is in the hand of Mafdet who dwells in the Mansion of Life. He will draw out those things which are in your mouth [the snake's poison fangs], he will draw off your poison with these four cords which belong to the sandals of Osiris. O monster, lie down! O bull, crawl away!" - Willems, Harco. The coffin of Heqata. Leuven, Uitgeverij Peeters en Departement Oriëntalistiek, 1996.
Mafdet was "closely associated with the scorpion goddess Hededet", who replaces Mafdet in variant Coffin Texts from Meir. (p 440, n. bq)
- Sederholm, Val Hinckley. Papyrus British Museum 10808 and its Cultural and Religious Setting. Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2006.
Mafdet appears in Spell Ten of the Ritual of Repelling Evil (which IIUC is found on two papyri from the NK), where she is called "Flaming-faced entity before the horizon, Mafdet, Piercer of Darkness". (In later copies of the spell she has become a "he-cat" who merely "gazes into darkness" - similarly, in the Coffin Texts, Pakhet is "the lioness who sees by night".) Sederholm writes, "we glimpse one Mafdet in shadow, another in streaming light. Without visible form she ranges her pre-dawn haunt. When she turns to face the horizon there gleam out two enkindling eyes... then comes the piercing attack of blazing eyes and claws as the panther leaps upward to grasp her celestial and transcendent form - rushing before the sun." Wow!
In Papyrus 10808, Horus the Behedite and his speckled plumage is mentioned straight after Mafdet; Sederholm speculates that Mafdet may be a similarly spotted cheetah or even a cheetah-hawk griffin. Similarly, in the Ramesseum Dramatic Papyrus, Horus offers a blessing to Osiris: "May Mafdet unite your limbs with their body"; and Horus is compared to Mafdet at Edfu.
Some links, parked here for later reference:
Mafdet at Henadology
Etymological dictionary of Egyptian