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Seth
Also known as: Set ~ Setekh ~ Setesh ~ Seti ~ Set ~
Suetekh
The ancient Egyptian god of chaos, the embodiment of hostility and even of
outright evil. He is also a god of war, deserts, storms, and foreign lands. As
the god of deserts he protects the caravans which travel through the desert, but
he also causes sandstorms which bring him into conflict with the fertility god
Osiris. The two are adversaries and in the Osiris myths, Seth killed his brother
and scattered the remains all over Egypt. Seth belongs to the Ennead of
Heliopolis and is the son of Geb and Nut (or Re and Nut). He is the brother of
Osiris, Isis, and Nephthys, who is sometimes given as his consort, although Seth
is more commonly associated with the foreign, Semitic goddesses Astarte and
Anat. During the 3rd millenium BCE Seth replaced Horus as the tutelary deity of
the pharaohs, but the story of Osiris' murder gained currency and Horus was
restored to his original status. The war that followed lasted eighty years,
during which Seth tore out Horus' left eye and Horus tore off Seth's foreleg and
testicles. Eventually, Horus emerged victorious, or was deemed the victor by the
council of the gods, and thus became the rightful ruler of the kingdoms of Lower
and Upper Egypt. Seth was forced to return the eye of Horus and was either
castrated or killed. In other versions he went to live with the sungod Re, where
he became the voice of thunder. In the Book of the Dead, Seth is called "Lord of
the Northern Sky" and is held responsible for storms and cloudy weather.
Despite his reputation, Seth has some good characteristics. He protects the sun
barge of Re during its nightly journey through the underworld and he fights the
snake-like monster Apep. On the other hand, he was a peril for ordinary
Egyptians in the underworld, where he was said to seize the souls of the unwary.
Seth was portrayed as a man with the head of
undeterminable origin, although some see in it the head of an aardvark. He had a
curved snout, erect square-tipped ears and a long forked tail. He was sometimes
entirely in animal form with the body similar to that of a greyhound. Animals
sacred to this god where the dog, the jackal, the gazelle, the donkey, the
crocodile, the hippopotamus, and the pig. There was an important sanctuary at
Ombos in Upper Egypt, his reputed birthplace, and considered to be the home of
his cult. This cult was also prominent in the north-eastern region of the Nile
delta. The Greeks equated him with their Typhon.
The name of Seth in hieroglyphs.
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