Concept cluster: History > ANE religion/mythology
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(Egyptian mythology) In ancient Egyptian mythology, the heavenly paradise where Osiris rules, described as boundless reed fields like those of the Nile Delta.
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(dated) An Ancient Egyptian amulet in the shape of a heart (ib).
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Alternative form of Abrasax (archon). [(historical) A theonym of unclear signification, commonly invoked as a magic word on amulets, talismans, and papyri in the Mediterranean basin from the 2nd century B.C. until the 13th century, and viewed in Gnosticism as one of the Archons who follows Sabaoth when he leaves the ranks of the Demiurge to become an aeon alongside Sophia.]
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(mythology) A minor god of vegetation in Sumerian mythology.
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Alternative form of Apsu [(Sumerian mythology, Akkadian mythology) Fresh water from underground aquifers that was given a religious quality.]
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The god of storms in Mesopotamian mythology.
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(Maya mythology) The personification of death in Maya mythology.
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(Egyptian mythology) A goddess in Egyptian mythology.
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In Egyptian mythology, (roughly) a spirit of the dead that has successfully completed its transition to the afterlife.
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(Egyptology) One of the three seasons of Ancient Egypt; Inundation.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian goddess, the Devourer of the Dead.
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Alternative form of Amun [(Egyptian mythology) An Egyptian wind deity associated with the town of Thebes; later (post-16th century BCE) the creator deity, often depicted with curling ram horns.]
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(Egyptian mythology) An Egyptian wind deity associated with the town of Thebes; later (post-16th century BCE) the creator deity, often depicted with curling ram horns.
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Alternative form of Anu [(Sumerian, Assyrian and Babylonian mythology) A sky-god, the god of heaven, lord of constellations, king of gods, spirits and demons, who dwelt in the highest heavenly region.]
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Alternative form of Anunnaki [(Mesopotamian mythology) A group of Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian deities in no known particular order including but not limited to Enki, Enlil, Ninlil and 'known as the fourth' Enbilulu.]
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An ancient Semitic goddess of war and fertility.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian war god
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian goddess, the wife of Anubis
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(Sumerian, Assyrian and Babylonian mythology) A sky-god, the god of heaven, lord of constellations, king of gods, spirits and demons, who dwelt in the highest heavenly region.
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(Egyptian mythology) In the mythology of ancient Egypt, the god of the dead and tombs, commonly depicted with the head of a jackal.
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An Ancient Egyptian goddess of the cataracts (“rapids”) of the Nile River. Sometimes treated as an aspect of the god of the Nile.
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Alternative form of Anunnaki [(Mesopotamian mythology) A group of Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian deities in no known particular order including but not limited to Enki, Enlil, Ninlil and 'known as the fourth' Enbilulu.]
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(Mesopotamian mythology) A group of Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian deities in no known particular order including but not limited to Enki, Enlil, Ninlil and 'known as the fourth' Enbilulu.
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(archaeology) Certain depictions of lion-headed eagles in Sumerian art.
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(Egyptian mythology) Alternative form of Apophis [(Egyptian mythology) An evil snake-god who tries to devour the sun every night.]
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(Egyptian mythology) An evil snake-god who tries to devour the sun every night.
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(Egyptian mythology) The Egyptian god of oases.
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(historical) A magical healer in ancient Mesopotamia.
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Alternative form of Astaroth [The great duke of Hell, in the first hierarchy with Beelzebub and Lucifer.]
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Alternative form of Astarte [A Semitic goddess of fertility, sexuality, and war, cognate in name, origin and function with the goddess Ishtar of Mesopotamian texts.]
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A Semitic goddess of fertility, sexuality, and war, cognate in name, origin and function with the goddess Ishtar of Mesopotamian texts.
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Alternative spelling of Astghik [(Armenian mythology) Ancient Armenian goddess of sensual love, beauty, and water. Lover of Vahagn. Often identified with Aphrodite and the planet Venus.]
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Alternative spelling of Astghik [(Armenian mythology) Ancient Armenian goddess of sensual love, beauty, and water. Lover of Vahagn. Often identified with Aphrodite and the planet Venus.]
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Alternative form of Atum [(Egyptian mythology) The creator god of Heliopolis, the original source of all matter, associated with the evening sun.]
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(Egyptology) The deified disc of the sun, as an aspect of Re or as the sole God under Akhenaten.
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(Egyptian mythology) The creator god of Heliopolis, the original source of all matter, associated with the evening sun.
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(Egyptian mythology) A being's soul or personality, represented as a bird-headed figure, which survives after death but must be sustained with offerings of food.
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(mythology, biblical) A storm and fertility god of the Phoenician and Canaanite pantheons, reckoned as chief of the gods by the 1st millennium BC.
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A goddess in Germanic paganism.
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Alternative spelling of Bastet [(Egyptian mythology) The goddess of the sun and the moon, of cats, and Lower Egypt; one of the "Eyes / Daughters of Ra", the consort of Ptah, often depicted as having a she-cat's head.]
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(Egyptian mythology) The goddess of the sun and the moon, of cats, and Lower Egypt; one of the "Eyes / Daughters of Ra", the consort of Ptah, often depicted as having a she-cat's head.
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(Roman mythology) Roman goddess of war, wife or sister of Mars. Equivalent to the Greek goddess Enyo.
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(Egyptian mythology, often with "the") A self-created deity with the form of a bird (in New Kingdom artwork, a heron) that features in the ancient Egyptian creation myth and is also described as the ba (soul) of Ra.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, the protector of households and mothers, children and childbirth.
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A warrior queen of the Volscians according to Virgil's Aeneid.
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The realm of the gods in Mesopotamian mythology, guarded by the demigod Humbaba and once entered by the hero Gilgamesh.
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(mythology) One of the major gods of Slavic mythology, most likely a solar deity and possibly a cultural hero.
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(Slavic mythology) A type of house sprite from Slavic mythology
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Name of Enki in Akkadian and Babylonian mythology.
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(mythology) In Sumerian religion, a class of utukku or spirits, envisioned as the ghosts of those who did not receive a proper burial.
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The deity Elagabal, venerated in ancient times at Emesa in Syria (and later elsewhere in the Roman Empire), identified with a large black stone.
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(Mesopotamian mythology) One of the three aspects of the god Enbilulu, as the power presiding over growth and abundance.
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A god in Sumerian mythology, later known as Ea in Akkadian and Babylonian mythology.
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(Mesopotamian mythology) A chief deity listed and written about in ancient Sumerian, Akkadian, Hittite, Canaanite and other Mesopotamian clay and stone tablets; the god of breath, wind, loft, and breadth.
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(Egyptian mythology) The collection of nine gods worshipped at Heliopolis and taking part in the Heliopolitan creation myth, together representing the sum of all the elements of the created world: Atum, Shu, Tefnut, Nut, Geb, Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys.
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(Greek mythology) Alternative form of Erebus [(Greek mythology) One of the Greek primordial deities who was the personification of darkness and shadow, brother-husband of Nyx and son of Chaos.]
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(Mesopotamian mythology) The goddess of the underworld.
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An ancient Egyptian symbol of protection, royal power, and good health, used for amulets etc.
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(Egyptian mythology) The god who serves as the personification of the earth.
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A partly-legendary king of Uruk, who is the hero of the Babylonian poem "Epic of Gilgamesh".
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In Egyptian mythology, a god of the deserts to the west of Egypt, associated with the underworld (Duat) and pictured as a man wearing the symbol for desert hills on his head.
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(Ancient Egypt) A mystic animating force present in the universe, used by deities and people.
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Synonym of Elagabalus (“sun deity”).
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(Egyptian mythology) The ancient Egyptian falcon-headed god of the sun, sky, war, and kingship.
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(historical) specifically, a serekh name featuring Horus atop the serekh, as opposed to those featuring a different god such as Set
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An Ancient Egyptian priest, the inventor of the pyramid.
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Sumerian goddess of sexual love, fertility, and warfare, known among the Akkadians as Ishtar.
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A goddess of fertility, love, sex and war. In the Babylonian pantheon, she was the divine personification of the planet Venus; the Assyrian and Babylonian counterpart to the Sumerian Inanna and to the northwest-Semitic goddess Astarte.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian goddess, the wife of Osiris and mother of Horus, worshiped as the ideal mother and wife and as the matron of nature and magic.
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The Hittite and Hattic goddess of the sun. She was a god of judgement, and was depicted bearing a winged sun on her crown or head-dress, and a crooked staff.
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A spiritual part of the soul in Egyptian mythology, which survived after death.
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(Egyptian mythology) Alternative form of Khepri [(Egyptian mythology) A scarab-faced god who represents the rising or morning sun.]
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(Egyptian mythology) A scarab-faced god who represents the rising or morning sun.
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One of the earliest Egyptian gods. He is said to be the source of the Nile River.
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In ancient Egyptian mythology, a part of the soul or spirit which left the body after death.
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(religion, mythology, Sumerian religion) In Sumerian mythology, the earth goddess and chief consort of the sky god, Anu.
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A god in Babylonian mythology, the son of Abzu and Tiamat.
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A motif in ancient Egyptian religious art, variously a winged egg, a globe surrounded by one or more serpents, or Amun in the form of a serpent called Kematef.
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animate statues of beautiful maidens, forged out of gold by the divine smith Hephaistos, who attended the Olympian gods
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(mythology) In Akkadian mythology, a protective and beneficent deity, the first-born son of Apsu and Tiamat.
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Alternative form of Lares. [(Roman mythology) The household deities watching over one's family and tutelary deities watching over some public places.]
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Alternative form of Maat (an Ancient Egyptian goddess, the personification of truth, order, and righteousness, symbolized by a feather). [An Ancient Egyptian goddess, the personification of truth, order, and righteousness, symbolized by a feather.]
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An Ancient Egyptian goddess, the personification of truth, order, and righteousness, symbolized by a feather.
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Alternative form of Maat (an Ancient Egyptian goddess, the personification of truth, order, and righteousness, symbolized by a feather). [An Ancient Egyptian goddess, the personification of truth, order, and righteousness, symbolized by a feather.]
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A god in Ancient Egyptian religion.
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A god once worshipped in the western interior parts of Anatolia, and associated with lunar symbolism.
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An Ancient Egyptian god of fertility and procreation.
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(uncommon) A deity invoked in the Hurrian Mitanni of ca. 1400 BC.
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(religion) A bull-shaped aspect of the god Atum-Ra venerated in Heliopolis.
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An ancient Ammonite deity worshiped by the Canaanites, Phoenician and related cultures in North Africa and the Levant.
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The ancient Canaanite god of death and the underworld.
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The ancient Mesopotamian patron god of literacy, the rational arts, scribes, and wisdom.
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(Sumerian mythology) The goddess of the primeval sea that gave rise to heaven and earth.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, who represented the first sunlight and the delightful smell of the Egyptian blue lotus flower
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Alternative spelling of Nefertem [(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, who represented the first sunlight and the delightful smell of the Egyptian blue lotus flower]
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(Egyptian mythology) The primeval goddess of war and creator deity.
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(Mesopotamian mythology) A deity worshipped throughout ancient Mesopotamia, associated with war, pestilence, and the Sun.
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(meaning uncertain) A woman of great pulchritude.
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In Sumerian mythology, the earth and mother goddess, one of the seven great deities of Sumer.
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(Mesopotamian mythology) In Sumerian mythology, the consort goddess of Enlil.
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Alternative form of Nergal [(Mesopotamian mythology) A deity worshipped throughout ancient Mesopotamia, associated with war, pestilence, and the Sun.]
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The Sumerian goddess of writing, learning, and the harvest.
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(Egyptian mythology) The god who serves as the personification of the primeval waters that existed before the world.
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(Egyptian mythology) The goddess who serves as the personification of the sky.
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The group of eight primordial deities worshipped at Hermopolis in Ancient Egyptian times: Naunet and Nu, Amaunet and Amun, Kauket and Kuk, and Hauhet and Huh.
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The Egyptian god of the dead and of the underworld.
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(mythology) In Assyrian and Babylonian mythology, the king of the demons of the wind, often depicted as a combination of diverse animal and human parts.
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(Egyptian mythology) A god of creativity and craftsmen, sometimes also identified with gods of death and the birth of the sun.
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A putative Canaanite goddess of sacred ecstasy and sexual pleasure.
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(Ancient Egyptian religion) A goddess adopted into the ancient Egyptian religion from the religion of Canaan, popular during the New Kingdom. She was a fertility goddess of sacred ecstasy and sexual pleasure. Her Canaan equivalent is the goddess Qadeshtu.
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(Egyptian mythology) The Egyptian god of the Sun.
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A sea monster in Levantine mythology similar to Tannin and Leviathan
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(mythology) An Egyptian fish god who fertilized the land with his tears.
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(Egyptian mythology) One’s name, as part of the soul in ancient Egyptian mythology.
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In ancient Egyptian mythology, a type of spiritual body which the Khu can inhabit.
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Ancient Meitei God of sky and heaven. He is the king of all gods.
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Alternative spelling of Satis [(Egyptian mythology) A war, hunting, and fertility goddess]
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(Egyptian mythology) A war, hunting, and fertility goddess
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Alternative spelling of Satis [(Egyptian mythology) A war, hunting, and fertility goddess]
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Alternative form of Sobek (Egyptian god) [An ancient Egyptian deity associated with the crocodile.]
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(Egyptian mythology) The goddess of death, war, violence, plague, and medicine; one of the "Eyes / Daughters of Ra", the consort of Ptah; depicted as having the head of a lioness.
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(Egyptian mythology) The Egyptian goddess of writing and wisdom, often depicted as a scribe or recordkeeper.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, variously described as the god of chaos, the god of thunder and storms, or the god of destruction.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, variously described as the god of chaos, the god of thunder and storms, or the god of destruction.
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Egyptian goddess of malevolent fire, sister of Bast, the bringer of ill-fortune
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(Egyptology) One of the three seasons of Ancient Egypt coming after Peret and before Akhet; Harvest.
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(Egyptian mythology) A god personifying the air and atmosphere.
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, the personification of perception.
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An ancient Babylonian goddess of wisdom, fermentation and merrymaking.
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(Akkadian, Assyrian and Babylonian mythology) The god of the moon.
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(mythology) The Slavic goddess of fertility
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An ancient Egyptian deity associated with the crocodile.
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An Egyptian falcon god
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(Egyptian mythology) An ancient Egyptian god, variously described as the god of chaos, the god of thunder and storms, or the god of destruction.
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A Sumerian god of food and vegetation.
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(Egyptian mythology) A goddess of the Heliopolitan Ennead, commonly taken to be a personification of moisture.
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The ancient Egyptian moon god of wisdom, learning, and magic, usually depicted as an ibis or baboon.
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Alternative spelling of thunder god [A god associated with thunder.]
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Alternative form of tyet [An ancient Egyptian symbol of the goddess Isis, resembling an ankh but with the arms curving downward.]
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the Egyptian goddesses Wadjet and Nekhbet
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(historical) The second of the five names of the pharaonic titulary, traditionally preceded by or incorporating the word nbtj.
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An ancient Egyptian symbol of the goddess Isis, resembling an ankh but with the arms curving downward.
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A representation of the sacred asp, symbolising supreme power in ancient Egypt.
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(mythology) A Sumerian deity, the son of the moon god Nanna and the goddess Ningal.
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(Slavic mythology) A type of water sprite from Slavic mythology
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(mythology) The patron goddess and namesake of the Ancient Egyptian city of Per-Wadjet, known as Buto to the Greeks. Wadjet takes the form of a cobra and is associated with the Eye of Horus.
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Alternative form of udjat (“the Eye of Horus”) [Synonym of Eye of Horus.]
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The god of vegetation, fertility, and springtime in Slavic mythology.
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(mythology) A divinity among the Getae, an ancient people of the lower Danube.
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Alternative form of Zarathustrian [(uncommon) A follower of Zarathustra (also known as Zoroaster).]
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(mythology) A lesser divinity of Akkadian mythology, and the son of the bird goddess Siris.

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