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ANCIENT EGYPT

The 'human' Egyptian Dynasties are dated from around 3100 B.C. beginning with Menes (aka Narmar), through to 332 B.C. when Egypt was conquered by the Grecian King Alexander The Great. So followed The Ptolemaic Dynasty up until 30 BC., when Egypt became a province of Rome under Augustus Caesar.

Memphis was the ancient capital of Aneb-Hetch, the first nome of Lower Egypt. Its ruins are located near the town of Mit Rahina, 20 km south of Giza. According to Manetho (a priest of Heliopolis around 261 B.C), Memphis was founded by Pharaoh Menes, and his son Athothis built a palace there. Sitchin's 'Ancient Astronaut Theory' makes reference to Menes as the first Pharaoh (god-king) of The Ancient Egyptian Dynasties who was part human, part Anunnaki. Manetho also calls Pharaoh Menes - Mestralm. Is this Ham's son Mizraim?

According to Sitchin, around 12,000 BC, "...EN.LIL eventually accepted that the humans had not been entirely destroyed, and when it was clear that Nibiru needed more gold for their atmosphere, he was happy that the humans could once again become the Annunaki's workers to mine the gold". I therefore query if the humans were to resume working as slaves for the Annunaki who needed the gold for Nibiru, then why did the Ancient Egyptians have such 'golden empires', and The Aztecs' legendary cities of gold? Surely that gold would have been needed for Nibiru?

 

Also, who were the slaves this time around? According to Genesis 10, 1 Chronicles 4:40, Psalms 104:23, 105: 23 and 106:22, Ham went to Egypt and had Cush. Ham's off-spring then spread through-out Egypt, The Sinai Peninsula, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and Cush had Nimrod who built The Tower of Babel (modern day Iraq). Japheth stayed in Turkey and his family spread to The Caucasus Mountains, Ukraine, Russia, Iran and Kazakhstan, and Shem had his off-spring who also spread to Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. None of these families speak of being slaves to mine gold for the Anunnaki? The Israelites were captives in Egypt way down the line after Jacob? Other ancient cultures speak of there being a flood, and granted, the gold had to be mined somehow as we have seen the product of the Egyptian Empire. However, there are no other ancient cultures that I am aware of that relay 'being slaved to mine gold for the Anunnaki after the flood'

   

 

THE KINGS LISTS

THE PHARAOH's AND QUEENS

There were 31 Dynasties between Menes and Rameses III. These rulers believed they were the direct descendants of the gods and as such, they would marry within their family to preserve their 'sacred' bloodlines. However, this was not just practised by the royals, the general public would also inter-marry within their families as well.

Akhenaten was one Pharaoh who chose to worship Aten (the one 'true' god represented by the sun-disc) and directed his people to worship Aten only. This practice created a new religion which the priests and other Egyptians including the royals did not like, and as soon as Akhenaten died, his successors went back to their multiple worship of deities with Ra (Marduk) as the greatest deity. Akhenaten was married to Queen Nefertiti and they had several children. Tutankhamun was the child who succeeded Akhenaten. Tutankhamun married his half-sister Ankhesenamun (Holloway, 2014; Klimczak, 2016).

 

 

 

 

 

 

The gods of the Ancient Egyptians were known as 'The Ennead' meaning 'group of nine'. They were an extended family of nine deities produced by Atum during the creation of the world. The Ennead consisted of Atum (later RA - The Creator God who took on various forms including that of YHWH, Ialdabaoth Jehovah); his children - Shu (Air) and Tefnut (Moisture); their children Geb (Earth) and Nut (Sky); and their children Osiris (god of omnipresence, omnipotence and omniscience), Isis (Queen of Heaven), Set (The Opposing Neter), and Nephthys (The Female Principle in the Unseen World).

Overall, the Egyptian deities were: - 

  • Aker – A god of the earth and the horizon

  • Amen/Amun/Ammon – A creator god, patron deity of the city of Thebes, and the pre-eminent deity in Egypt during the New Kingdom

  • Ammit – A goddess who devoured condemned souls

  • Amenhotep son of Hapu – A scribe and architect in the court of Amenhotep III, later deified for his wisdom

  • Am-heh – A dangerous underworld god

  • Amunet – A female counterpart of Amun and a member of the Ogdoad

  • Anat – A war and fertility goddess, originally from Syria, who entered Egyptian religion in the Middle Kingdom

  • Anhur – A god of war and hunting

  • Anput - A goddess of the dead and mummification

  • Anti – A falcon god, worshipped in Middle Egypt, who appears in myth as a ferryman for greater gods

  • Anubis – A god of embalming and protector of the dead who succeeded Osiris as god of the underworld

  • Anuket – A goddess of Egypt's southern frontier regions, particularly the lower cataracts of the Nile

  • Apedemak – A warlike lion god from Nubia who appears in some Egyptian-built temples in Lower Nubia

  • Apep – A serpent deity who personified malevolent chaos and was said to fight Ra in the underworld every night

  • Apis – A live bull worshipped as a god at Memphis and seen as a manifestation of Ptah

  • Arensnuphis – A Nubian deity who appears in Egyptian temples in Lower Nubia in the Greco-Roman era

  • Ash – A god of the Libyan Desert and oases west of Egypt

  • Astarte – A warrior goddess from Syria and Canaan who entered Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom

  • Aten – A sun disk deity who became the focus of the monolatrous or monotheistic Atenist belief system in the reign of Akhenaten

  • Atum – A creator god and solar deity, first god of The Ennead

  • Baal – A sky and storm god from Syria and Canaan, worshipped in Egypt during the New Kingdom

  • Ba'alat Gebal – A Canaanite goddess, patroness of the city of Byblos, adopted into Egyptian religion

  • Babi – A baboon god characterized by sexuality and aggression

  • Banebdjedet – A ram god, patron of the city of Mendes

  • Ba-Pef – A little-known underworld deity

  • Bast – A goddess represented as a cat or lioness, patroness of the city of Bubastis, linked with fertility and protection from evil

  • Bat – A cow goddess from early in Egyptian history, eventually absorbed by Hathor

  • Bennu – A solar and creator deity, depicted as a bird

  • Bes – An Apotropaic god, represented as a dwarf, particularly important in protecting children and women in childbirth

  • Buchis – A live bull god worshipped in the region around Thebes and a manifestation of Montu

  • Dedun – A Nubian god, said to provide the Egyptians with incense and other resources that came from Nubia

  • Geb – An earth god and member of the Ennead

  • Ha – A god of the Libyan Desert and oases west of Egypt

  • Hapi – A personification of the Nile flood

  • Hathor – One of the most important goddesses, linked with the sky, the sun, sexuality and motherhood, music and dance, foreign lands and goods, and the afterlife. One of many forms of the Eye of Ra.

  • Hatmehit – A fish goddess worshipped at Mendes

  • Hedetet – A minor scorpion goddess

  • Heh – A personification of infinity and a member of the Ogdoad

  • Heka – A personification of magic

  • Heket – A frog goddess said to protect women in childbirth

  • Heryshaf – A ram god worshipped at Herakleopolis Magna

  • Hesat – A maternal cow goddess

  • Horus – A major god, usually shown as a falcon or as a human child, linked with the sky, the sun, kingship, protection, and healing. Often said to be the son of Osiris and Isis.

  • Hu – A personification of the authority of the spoken word

  • Iah – A moon god

  • Iat – A goddess of milk and nursing

  • Ihy – A child deity born to Horus and Hathor, representing the music and joy produced by the sistrum

  • Imentet – An afterlife goddess closely linked with Isis and Hathor

  • Imhotep – An architect and vizier to Djoser, eventually deified as a healer god

  • Ishtar – The East Semitic version of Astarte, occasionally mentioned in Egyptian texts

  • Isis – Wife of Osiris and mother of Horus, linked with funerary rites, motherhood, protection, and magic. She became a major deity in Greek and Roman religion.

  • Iusaaset – A female counterpart to Atum

  • Khepri – A solar creator god, often treated as the morning form of Ra and represented by a scarab beetle

  • Kherty – A netherworld god, usually depicted as a ram

  • Khnum – A ram god, the patron deity of Elephantine, who was said to control the Nile flood and give life to gods and humans

  • Khonsu – A moon god, son of Amun and Mut

  • Maahes – A lion god, son of Bastet

  • Maat – A goddess who personified truth, justice, and order

  • Mafdet – A predatory goddess said to destroy dangerous creatures

  • Mandulis – A lower Nubian solar deity who appeared in some Egyptian temples

  • Mehit – A lioness goddess, consort of Anhur

  • Menhit – A lioness goddess

  • Mehen – A serpent god who protects the barque of Ra as it travels through the underworld

  • Mehet-Weret – A celestial cow goddess

  • Meretseger – A cobra goddess who oversaw the Theban Necropolis

  • Meskhenet – A goddess who presided over childbirth

  • Min – A god of virility, as well as the cities of Akhmim and Qift and the Eastern Desert beyond them

  • Mnevis – A live bull god worshipped at Heliopolis as a manifestation of Ra

  • Montu – A god of war and the sun, worshipped at Thebes

  • Mut – A consort of Amun, worshipped at Thebes

  • Nebethetepet – A female counterpart to Atum

  • Nefertum – A god of the lotus blossom from which the sun god rose at the beginning of time. Son of Ptah and Sekhmet.

  • Nehebu-Kau – A protective serpent god

  • Nehmetawy – A minor goddess, the consort of Nehebu-Kau or Thoth

  • Neith – A creator and hunter goddess, patron of the city of Sais in Lower Egypt

  • Nekhbet – A vulture goddess, the tutelary deity of Upper Egypt

  • Neper – A god of grain

  • Nephthys – A member of the Ennead, the consort of Set, who mourned Osiris alongside Isis

  • Nu – A personification of the formless, watery disorder from which the world emerged at creation and a member of the Ogdoad

  • Nut – A sky goddess, a member of the Ennead

  • Osiris – A god of death and resurrection who ruled the underworld and enlivened vegetation, the sun god, and deceased souls

  • Pakhet – A lioness goddess mainly worshipped in the area around Beni Hasan

  • Ptah – A creator deity and god of craftsmen, the patron god of Memphis

  • Qetesh – A goddess of sexuality and sacred ecstasy from Syria and Canaan, adopted into Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom

  • Ra – The foremost Egyptian sun god, involved in creation and the afterlife. Mythological ruler of the gods, father of every Egyptian king, and the patron god of Heliopolis.

  • Raet-Tawy – A female counterpart to Ra

  • Renenutet – An agricultural goddess

  • Reshep – A Syrian war god adopted into Egyptian religion in the New Kingdom

  • Renpet – A goddess who personified the year

  • Satet – A goddess of Egypt's southern frontier regions

  • Seker – A god of the Memphite Necropolis and of the afterlife in general

  • Sekhmet – A lioness goddess, both destructive and violent and capable of warding off disease. The consort of Ptah and one of many forms of the Eye of Ra.

  • Serapis – A Greco-Egyptian god from the Ptolemaic Period who fused traits of Osiris and Apis with those of several Greek gods. Husband of Isis who, like her, was adopted into Greek and Roman religion outside Egypt.

  • Serket – A scorpion goddess, invoked for healing and protection

  • Seshat – A goddess of writing and record-keeping, depicted as a scribe

  • Set – An ambivalent god, characterized by violence, chaos, and strength, connected with the desert. Mythological murderer of Osiris and enemy of Horus, but also a supporter of the king.

  • Shai – A personification of fate

  • Shed – A god believed to save people from danger and misfortune

  • Shesmetet – A lioness goddess

  • Shezmu – A god of wine and oil presses who also slaughters condemned souls

  • Shu – An embodiment of wind or air, a member of the Ennead

  • Sia – A personification of perception

  • Sobek – A crocodile god, worshipped in the Faiyum and at Kom Ombo

  • Sopdu – A god of the sky and of Egypt's eastern border regions

  • Sopdet – A deification of the star Sirius

  • Ta-Bitjet – A minor scorpion goddess

  • Tatenen – A personification of the first mound of earth to emerge from chaos in ancient Egyptian creation myths

  • Taweret – A hippopotamus goddess, protector of women in childbirth

  • Tefnut – A goddess of moisture and a member of the Ennead

  • Thoth – A moon god, and a god of writing and scribes, and patron deity of Hermopolis

  • Tutu – An apotropaic god from the Greco-Roman era

  • Unut – A goddess represented as a snake or a hare, worshipped in the region of Hermopolis

  • Wadjet – A cobra goddess, the tutelary deity of Lower Egypt

  • Wadj-wer – A personification of the Mediterranean sea or lakes of the Nile Delta

  • Weneg – A son of Ra who maintains cosmic order

  • Wepwawet – A jackal god, the patron deity of Asyut, connected with warfare and the afterlife

  • Werethekau – A goddess who protected the king

  • Wosret – A minor goddess of Thebes

  • Yam – A Syrian god of the sea who appears in some Egyptian texts

 

Groups of deities

  • The Ogdoad – A set of eight gods who were responsible for Creation according to The Hermopolitans of Upper Egypt'. The Ogdoad consisted of: -

    • Amun and Amunet (air and wind), 

    • Nun and Naunet (Primeval Matter and Space),

    • Huh and Hauhet (Darkness and Obscurity), and,

    • Huk and Kauket (Limitable and the Boundless)

  • The four sons of Horus – Four gods who protected the mummified body, particularly the internal organs in canopic jars.

  • The Souls of Pe and Nekhen – A set of gods personifying the pre-dynastic rulers of Upper and Lower Egypt.

THE gODS OF ANCIENT EGYPT

The Ennead
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