Difference between revisions of "Horus"

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In one tale, Horus is born to the goddess [[Isis]] after she retrieved all the dismembered body parts of her murdered husband Osiris, except his penis, which was thrown into the Nile and eaten by a catfish, or sometimes depicted as instead by a crab, and according to Plutarch's account used her magic powers to resurrect Osiris and fashion a phallus to conceive her son (older Egyptian accounts have the penis of Osiris surviving).
In one tale, Horus is born to the goddess [[Isis]] after she retrieved all the dismembered body parts of her murdered husband Osiris, except his penis, which was thrown into the Nile and eaten by a catfish, or sometimes depicted as instead by a crab, and according to Plutarch's account used her magic powers to resurrect Osiris and fashion a phallus to conceive her son (older Egyptian accounts have the penis of Osiris surviving).


After becoming pregnant with Horus, Isis fled to the Nile Delta marshlands to hide from her brother [[Set]], who jealously killed Osiris and who she knew would want to kill their son. There Isis bore a divine son, Horus. As birth, death and rebirth are recurrent themes in [[Egyptian religion|Egyptian lore]] and cosmology, it is not particularly strange that Horus also is the brother of Osiris and Isis, by [[Nut]] and [[Geb]], together with [[Nephtys]] and Set. This elder Horus is called ''Hrw-wr'' - as opposed to ''Hrw-P-Khrd'' - the younger Horus, at some point adopted by the Greeks as Harpocrates.
After becoming pregnant with Horus, Isis fled to the Nile Delta marshlands to hide from her brother [[Set]], who jealously killed Osiris and who she knew would want to kill their son. There Isis bore a divine son, Horus. As birth, death and rebirth are recurrent themes in [[Egyptian religion|Egyptian lore]] and cosmology, it is not particularly strange that Horus also is the brother of Osiris and Isis, by [[Nut]] and [[Geb]], together with [[Nephthys‏‎]] and [[Set]]. This elder Horus is called ''Hrw-wr'' - as opposed to ''Hrw-P-Khrd'' - the younger Horus, at some point adopted by the Greeks as Harpocrates.


==Forms of Horus==
==Forms of Horus==