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The Divine Family |
The pharaohs of
Egypt traced their lineage to the god Horus.
Horus was the son of Osiris and
Isis, two of the nine primeval gods
of the Egyptian
Ennead.
The story begins when Osiris reigned on earth and married his sister
Isis. Their mission was to bring civilization to humanity, to teach people
about the practice of government, religion and marriage. Isis's magical
healing powers, and her knowledge of weaving, crop growing, corn
grinding and flax spinning were also passed on to the Egyptian people.
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Holding a crook and flail, Osiris
sits on his throne under a canopy in judgement of the dead. His wife,
Isis (left), and his sister Nephthys stand behind him.
Book of the Dead, Papyrus of Hunefer
British Museum
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Murder
One day, disaster struck. Seth, the
god of disorder, murdered his brother Osiris, the god of order. Seth
was furious because his wife, Nephthys,
had conceived a child, named Anubis,
by Osiris. The murder happened at a banquet when Seth invited guests to
lie down in a coffin he had made for the king. Several guests tried
unsuccessfully. When Osiris climbed in, Seth and his conspirators nailed
down the lid, weighed the coffin down with lead and cast it into the
Nile.
This happened in July when the waters of the Nile were rising.
Nun (the primeval sea) took Osiris away
to hide his secrets. The death of Osiris threw the cosmos into chaos
and made the gods weep. Isis, greatly distraught, wandered throughout
the land in search of her husband, asking everyone if they had seen him.
A Child Is Conceived
Through divine revelation, Isis found out that the coffin had drifted
down to the sea and washed ashore at Byblos, in Phoenicia. A tamarisk
tree had grown up around the coffin, completely enclosing it in its
trunk. When Isis found the tree, she released the coffin from it and
shipped it back to Egypt. While grieving over her husband's body, she
transformed herself into a kite. As she flew over the body, she
miraculously conceived a child.
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Horus
Bronze
Late Period
Royal Ontario Museum 910.17.50
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Osiris
Bronze
Late Period
Royal Ontario Museum 910.17.48
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Isis
Bronze
Late Period
Royal Ontario Museum 910.17.36
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Hiding in the Marshes
When Isis returned to Egypt, she hid from Seth in the delta marshes. One
day, Seth discovered Osiris's coffin and dismembered his body into
fourteen parts that he scattered throughout the land. Isis managed to
find all the parts, except the phallus, which she reconstituted. She
anointed his body with precious oils and performed the rites of embalming
for the first time. In so doing, she restored Osiris to eternal life.
Osiris went on to live in the land of the deceased, presiding over the
judgement of the dead.
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Wild ducks fly over a papyrus thicket in the Nile marshlands. This painting
comes from Amarna, the city built by the pharaoh
Akhenaten.
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Isis tried to hide her pregnancy from Seth.
Thoth, the god of wisdom, advised her
to flee because Seth would try to kill her child. She went to the
marshes, where she gave birth to her son, Horus. Isis hid the child in
the marshes, where she cured him from scorpion, snake and crocodile
bites. One day, she left her son to search for food, and upon her return,
she found him half dead. Seth had entered the marsh, transformed himself
into a poisonous snake and bit the child.
Healing Horus
Isis called for help from the high gods. Her pleas were heard by the
gods in the Bark of Millions of Years (the
solar bark).
Thoth descended to talk to her. He told her that the powers of
Re would set things right and that
good would triumph over evil. Then the solar bark stopped and the earth
fell into darkness. Thoth assured Isis that the earth would remain in
darkness, that wells would dry up and that crops would fail until Horus
was cured. Then, in the name of the sun, he exorcised the poison from
Horus's body and cured the child.
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The sun god travels through the darkness of night in his solar bark.
Drawing: Nancy Ruddell
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The people of the marshland rejoiced with Isis at the recovery of her
son. Horus became the archetype of the pharaohs, the sun god's
representative on earth. It was now the duty of the people to protect
the pharaohs from harm, to love and respect them. If they did not, world
order would collapse and the people would perish. Isis kept her young
son hidden until he became an adolescent and could face Seth to claim
his rightful inheritance, the throne of Egypt.
The Sun God's Secret
While Horus was growing up, the sun god, Re, grew old and started
drooling. Isis took the saliva that fell to the ground and modelled it
into a serpent. She placed the serpent across Re's daily path in the
sky, and it bit the sun. Since the sun had not made the serpent, he
could not cure himself. He turned to Isis for help. She said she could
do nothing unless he revealed his secret name to her. By learning his
name, she would gain knowledge of his power.
Re realized this was the only way he could be cured. He hid from the
other gods and allowed his secret name to be passed from his bosom
directly to hers. Isis was forbidden from revealing it to anyone except
her son Horus. The Eye of Re the
supreme power of the
creator was thus given to Horus, and subsequently to all the
pharaohs down through the ages. It then became known as the Eye of Horus.
Horus, King of the Two Lands
When Horus was a young man, he and his uncle Seth quarrelled over who
was the legitimate divinely appointed ruler of Egypt. During the
fierce battle that ensued, Horus castrated Seth, and Seth tore out
Horus's weak eye, the moon. A tribunal of the gods was held to settle
the dispute.
It was decided that Horus should rule over Lower Egypt and Seth
should rule over Upper Egypt. This was later considered unworkable,
so Horus was made king of the Two Lands of Egypt, and Seth took on
the role of defender of Re by standing at the prow of the solar bark.
Horus became the god of kingship, and the pharaohs traced their lineage
to him, the god who triumphed over evil.
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