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The Creation Myth |
Like other creation myths, Egypt's is complex and
offers several versions of how the world unfolded. The ancient Egyptians
believed that the basic principles of life, nature and society were
determined by the gods at the creation of the world. It all began with
the first stirring of the High God in the primeval waters.
The
creation
myth is recounted in the sacred
hieroglyphic writings found
on pyramids, temples, tombs and sheets of papyrus. These writings describe
how the earth was created out of chaos by the god
Atum. The earth was seen as a sacred
landscape, a reflection of the sky world where the gods resided.
The creation of the universe took place over a long period of time
when the gods lived on earth and established kingdoms based on the
principles of justice. When the gods left the earth to reside in the
sky world, the pharaohs
inherited the right to rule.
The First Gods
The Book of the Dead, dating
to the Second Intermediate Period,
describes how the world was created by Atum, the god of
Heliopolis,
the centre of the sun-god cult in Lower Egypt. In the beginning, the world
appeared as an infinite expanse of dark and directionless waters, named
Nun.
Nun was personified as four pairs of male and female deities. Each
couple represented one of four principles that characterized Nun:
hiddenness or invisibility, infinite water, straying or lack of direction,
and darkness or lack of light.
Atum created himself out of Nun by an effort of will or by uttering his
own name. As the creator of the gods and humans, he was responsible for
bringing order to the heavens and the earth. As Lord of the Heavens and
Earth, he wears the Double Crown
of Upper and Lower Egypt and carries
the ankh, a symbol of life and a
was sceptre, a symbol of royal
authority.
According to the
Pyramid Texts, written on the walls of pyramids, the
creator god emerged from the chaotic darkness of Nun as a mythical
Bennu bird
(similar to a heron or phoenix). He flew to Heliopolis, an
ancient city near Cairo, where, at dawn, he alighted on the Benben,
an obelisk representing a ray of the sun. After fashioning a nest of
aromatic boughs and spices, he was consumed in a fire and miraculously
sprang back to life. The capstone placed at the top of an obelisk
or a pyramid is associated with the Bennu. Called a
pyramidion or the Bennu, it is a symbol
of rebirth and immortality.
The Creator God's Offspring
At a time the Egyptians called Zep Tepi (the First Time), Atum
created two offspring. His son, Shu,
represented dry air, and his daughter, Tefnut,
represented corrosive moist air. The twins symbolize two universal
principles of human existence: life and right (justice).
The twins separated the sky from the waters. They produced children
named Geb, the dry land, and
Nut, the sky. When the primeval waters
receded, a mound of earth (Geb) appeared, providing the first solid dry
land for the sun god, Re, to rest.
During the dynastic period, Atum was also known as Re, meaning the sun
at its first rising.
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Shu, the god of air, separates
the sky goddess, Nut, from the earth god, Geb. Two ram-headed gods
stand beside Shu.
Drawing: Catherine Fitzpatrick
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Geb and Nut produced four offspring: Seth,
the god of disorder; Osiris, the god
of order; and their sisters, Nephthys
and Isis. This new generation completed
the Heliopolitan Ennead, the group of nine deities that began with Atum,
the primeval creator god.
In another version of the creation story, the city of
Hermopolis,
in Middle Egypt, substituted the Ennead with a group of eight deities
called the Ogdoad. It consisted of four pairs of gods and goddesses
symbolizing different aspects of the chaos that existed before creation.
The goddesses were depicted as snakes and the gods as frogs. Their names
were Nun and Naunet (water), Amun and Amaunet (hiddenness), Heh and
Hauhet (infinity), and Kek and Kauket (darkness).
The Sun God's Eye
The sun god, Re (a form of Atum), ruled over the earth, where humans
and divine beings coexisted. Humans were created from the
Eye of Re or wedjat (eye
of wholeness). This happened when the eye separated from Re and failed
to return. Shu and Tefnut went to fetch it, but the eye resisted. In
the ensuing struggle, the eye shed tears from which humans were born.
The familiar eye motif is an enduring symbol for the creator, Atum, for
Re and for Horus, the son of Osiris and
Isis. It represents the power to see, to illuminate and to act. The act
of bringing the eye back to the creator was equivalent to healing the
earth the restoration of right and order. Maintaining right and
order to prevent the earth from falling into chaos was central to the
pharaoh's role.
Another version of the creation myth states that the wedjat
simply wandered off, so Re sent Thoth,
the moon god, to fetch it. When it returned, the eye found that another
eye had taken its place. To pacify the furious eye, Re placed it on
his brow in the shape of a uraeus (a
cobra
goddess), where it could rule the whole world. Pharaohs
wore the uraeus on their brows as a
symbol of protection and to show that they were descended from the sun god.
The First Rebellion
When Re became old, the deities tried to take advantage of his senility.
Even humans plotted against him, which led to their fall from divine
grace. In reaction to the rebellion, Re sent his eye to slaughter
the rebels, a deed he accomplished by transforming himself into
Sekhmet, a raging powerful goddess
(depicted as a lion). After punishing his foes, he changed himself
into the contented goddess Hathor
(depicted as a cow).
In pain, and weary of these problems, Re withdrew from the world.
Taking the form of Hathor, he mounted on Nut (sky), who raised him to
the heavens. The other gods clung to Hathor's belly and became the
stars. Following this, Thoth, the moon god, was given a spell to protect
humans from harm when the sun disappeared below the earth. From that
moment on, humans were separated from the gods, as earth was separated
from the heavens.
Re's Journey
Now Re lived in the heavens, where order was established. Each morning
he was reborn in the east and travelled across the sky in a boat,
called the Bark of Millions of Years, accompanied by a number of
gods who acted as his crew. The sun god was carried across the sky by
the scarab god, Khepri, a dung beetle. His
chief enemy was the Apep, a huge serpent that lived in the Nile and the
waters of Nun. Apep tried to obstruct the solar bark's daily passage, but
the sun god was ultimately victorious.
The sun god was the most important deity in the Egyptian pantheon. He
had many names: as the sun disk, he was Aten; as the rising sun, he
was Khepri, the scarab; at the sun's zenith, he was Re, the supreme
god of Heliopolis; and as the setting sun, he was Atum. Egypt's
pyramids and obelisks, as well as the
sphinx, were associated with
the sun god. In the New Kingdom,
the sphinx was a symbol for the sun god as
Re-Horakhty, the winged sun disk
that appeared on the horizon at dawn.
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| The
scarab buries its eggs in dung, which
it rolls into a hole in the earth,
where the eggs hatch. It became a symbol for the sun god, who took the
form of a scarab when he pushed the sun out of the eastern horizon for
its daily journey across the sky. |
The sun, symbol of light and enlightenment, is probably the most
enduring symbol found in ancient and modern religions. Living in a land
of eternal sunshine, it is little wonder the ancient Egyptians chose
the sun as the prime symbol for the creator of the universe.
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