Skip to content

College of Thelema: Thelemic Education

College of Thelema and Temple of Thelema

  • A∴A∴
  • College of Thelema
  • Temple of Thelema
  • Publications
  • Forum
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Collapse

Images of the Gods in Liber Resh vel Helios

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Magick
75 Posts 33 Posters 7.3k Views 1 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • A AliceKnewIt

    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

    Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

    My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

    Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

    One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


    As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

    Ra in the sun barque:
    www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

    Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
    innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
    www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

    Model boat for a tomb:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
    artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
    ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

    Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
    www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
    www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
    (thanks to Lucero)

    "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
    The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


    Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

    As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
    www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

    As a man with an Ibis head:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
    ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

    Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
    www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

    Tahuti as an ibis:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

    Photos of the sacred Ibis:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
    orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
    ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

    Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
    farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
    1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

    Photos of the African Baboon:
    1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
    www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
    images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


    Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

    Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
    amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

    This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

    This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

    Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

    Horus as a falcon:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
    farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

    Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
    farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
    farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

    Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
    www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
    inyurl.com/ybxhat6

    Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
    clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


    Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

    Hathor in human form:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
    Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
    www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

    Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
    farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

    Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
    farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
    mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


    Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

    Essay on Atum, with photos:
    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

    Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
    www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

    Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
    inyurl.com/bmjc5e
    fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

    Atum - modern drawing
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


    Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

    Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
    img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
    www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

    Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

    Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
    www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

    Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
    farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

    The scarab in the sun barque:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
    www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

    Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
    www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

    Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
    1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
    fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

    It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


    Love is the law, love under will.

    L Offline
    L Offline
    Laura Marx
    wrote on last edited by
    #63

    "No opinion per se, except that it isn't Liber Resh "

    Hahaha, oh, gosh. 😊 Of course!

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • A AliceKnewIt

      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

      Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

      My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

      Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

      One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


      As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

      Ra in the sun barque:
      www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

      Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
      innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
      www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

      Model boat for a tomb:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
      artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
      ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

      Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
      www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
      www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
      (thanks to Lucero)

      "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
      The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


      Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

      As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
      www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

      As a man with an Ibis head:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
      ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

      Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
      www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

      Tahuti as an ibis:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

      Photos of the sacred Ibis:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
      orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
      ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

      Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
      farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
      1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

      Photos of the African Baboon:
      1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
      www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
      images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


      Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

      Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
      amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

      This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

      This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

      Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

      Horus as a falcon:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
      farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

      Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
      farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
      farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

      Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
      www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
      inyurl.com/ybxhat6

      Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
      clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


      Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

      Hathor in human form:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
      Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
      www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

      Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
      farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

      Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
      farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
      mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


      Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

      Essay on Atum, with photos:
      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

      Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
      www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

      Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
      inyurl.com/bmjc5e
      fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

      Atum - modern drawing
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


      Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

      Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
      img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
      www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

      Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

      Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
      www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

      Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
      farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

      The scarab in the sun barque:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
      www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

      Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
      www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

      Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
      1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
      fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

      It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


      Love is the law, love under will.

      D Offline
      D Offline
      DavidH
      wrote on last edited by
      #64

      93!

      I searched through the thread and ITC issues and could not find a direct answer to this. When "performing" Resh and giving the "sign of your grade," are you visualizing the God form in your exact body position? So, instead of seeing the God in it's characteristic stance, you would instead see it in your grade sign?

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • A AliceKnewIt

        Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

        Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

        My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

        Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

        One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


        As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

        Ra in the sun barque:
        www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

        Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
        innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
        www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

        Model boat for a tomb:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
        artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
        ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

        Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
        www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
        www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
        (thanks to Lucero)

        "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
        The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


        Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

        As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
        www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

        As a man with an Ibis head:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
        ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

        Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
        www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

        Tahuti as an ibis:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

        Photos of the sacred Ibis:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
        orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
        ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

        Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
        farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
        1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

        Photos of the African Baboon:
        1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
        www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
        images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


        Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

        Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
        amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

        This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

        This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

        Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

        Horus as a falcon:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
        farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

        Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
        farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
        farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

        Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
        www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
        inyurl.com/ybxhat6

        Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
        clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


        Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

        Hathor in human form:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
        Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
        www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

        Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
        farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

        Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
        farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
        mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


        Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

        Essay on Atum, with photos:
        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

        Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
        www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

        Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
        inyurl.com/bmjc5e
        fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

        Atum - modern drawing
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


        Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

        Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
        img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
        www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

        Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

        Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
        www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

        Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
        farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

        The scarab in the sun barque:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
        www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

        Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
        www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

        Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
        1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
        fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

        It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


        Love is the law, love under will.

        J Offline
        J Offline
        Jim Eshelman
        wrote on last edited by
        #65

        Yes.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • A AliceKnewIt

          Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

          Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

          My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

          Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

          One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


          As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

          Ra in the sun barque:
          www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

          Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
          innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
          www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

          Model boat for a tomb:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
          artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
          ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

          Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
          www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
          www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
          (thanks to Lucero)

          "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
          The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


          Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

          As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
          www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

          As a man with an Ibis head:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
          ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

          Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
          www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

          Tahuti as an ibis:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

          Photos of the sacred Ibis:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
          orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
          ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

          Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
          farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
          1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

          Photos of the African Baboon:
          1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
          www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
          images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


          Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

          Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
          amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

          This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

          This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

          Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

          Horus as a falcon:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
          farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

          Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
          farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
          farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

          Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
          www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
          inyurl.com/ybxhat6

          Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
          clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


          Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

          Hathor in human form:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
          Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
          www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

          Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
          farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

          Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
          farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
          mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


          Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

          Essay on Atum, with photos:
          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

          Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
          www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

          Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
          inyurl.com/bmjc5e
          fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

          Atum - modern drawing
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


          Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

          Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
          img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
          www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

          Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

          Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
          www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

          Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
          farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

          The scarab in the sun barque:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
          www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

          Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
          www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

          Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
          1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
          fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

          It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


          Love is the law, love under will.

          Q Offline
          Q Offline
          Quaestor Lucis
          wrote on last edited by
          #66

          And I always thought that when I physically stand in the Sign of Grade (with eyes closed), I should imagine the God in it's characteristic posture. 😞
          If I'm wrong then what happens with the God-form when I change my physical posture? When should I release it?

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A AliceKnewIt

            Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

            Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

            My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

            Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

            One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


            As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

            Ra in the sun barque:
            www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

            Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
            innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
            www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

            Model boat for a tomb:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
            artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
            ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

            Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
            www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
            www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
            (thanks to Lucero)

            "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
            The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


            Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

            As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
            www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

            As a man with an Ibis head:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
            ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

            Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
            www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

            Tahuti as an ibis:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

            Photos of the sacred Ibis:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
            orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
            ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

            Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
            farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
            1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

            Photos of the African Baboon:
            1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
            www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
            images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


            Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

            Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
            amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

            This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

            This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

            Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

            Horus as a falcon:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
            farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

            Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
            farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
            farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

            Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
            www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
            inyurl.com/ybxhat6

            Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
            clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


            Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

            Hathor in human form:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
            Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
            www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

            Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
            farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

            Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
            farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
            mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


            Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

            Essay on Atum, with photos:
            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

            Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
            www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

            Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
            inyurl.com/bmjc5e
            fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

            Atum - modern drawing
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


            Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

            Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
            img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
            www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

            Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

            Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
            www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

            Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
            farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

            The scarab in the sun barque:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
            www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

            Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
            www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

            Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
            1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
            fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

            It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


            Love is the law, love under will.

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Jim Eshelman
            wrote on last edited by
            #67

            @Quaestor Lucis said

            "And I always thought that when I physically stand in the Sign of Grade (with eyes closed), I should imagine the God in it's characteristic posture. 😞
            If I'm wrong then what happens with the God-form when I change my physical posture? When should I release it?"

            When assuming a god-form, you should experience it as your body. Its position should be your physical position unless you are withdrawing from it. When you change position, it also changes position.

            It's like your robe. Your robe doesn't keep its arms at its side when you raise yours, right? - But, even more so, it's your body, and you should entirely experience it as being your body, so far as possible.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • A AliceKnewIt

              Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

              Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

              My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

              Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

              One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


              As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

              Ra in the sun barque:
              www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

              Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
              innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
              www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

              Model boat for a tomb:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
              artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
              ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

              Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
              www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
              www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
              www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
              www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
              (thanks to Lucero)

              "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
              The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


              Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

              As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
              www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

              As a man with an Ibis head:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
              ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

              Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
              www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

              Tahuti as an ibis:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

              Photos of the sacred Ibis:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
              orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
              ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

              Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
              farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
              1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

              Photos of the African Baboon:
              1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
              www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
              images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


              Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

              Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
              amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

              This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
              www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

              This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
              www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

              Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

              Horus as a falcon:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
              farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

              Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
              farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
              farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

              Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
              www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
              inyurl.com/ybxhat6

              Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
              clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


              Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

              Hathor in human form:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
              Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
              www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

              Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
              farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

              Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
              farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
              mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


              Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

              Essay on Atum, with photos:
              www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

              Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
              www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

              Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
              inyurl.com/bmjc5e
              fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

              Atum - modern drawing
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


              Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

              Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
              img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
              www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

              Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

              Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
              www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

              Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
              farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

              The scarab in the sun barque:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
              www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

              Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
              www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

              Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
              commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
              1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
              fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

              It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


              Love is the law, love under will.

              Q Offline
              Q Offline
              Quaestor Lucis
              wrote on last edited by
              #68

              I understood, thank you 😀

              God-form assumed throughout the whole ritual? And the God-form is the only thing that I need to visualize in Liber Resh, right?

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • A AliceKnewIt

                Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                Ra in the sun barque:
                www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                Model boat for a tomb:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                (thanks to Lucero)

                "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                As a man with an Ibis head:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                Tahuti as an ibis:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                Photos of the African Baboon:
                1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                Horus as a falcon:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                Hathor in human form:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                Essay on Atum, with photos:
                www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                Atum - modern drawing
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                The scarab in the sun barque:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                Love is the law, love under will.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Jim Eshelman
                wrote on last edited by
                #69

                @Quaestor Lucis said

                "God-form assumed throughout the whole ritual? And the God-form is the only thing that I need to visualize in Liber Resh, right?"

                No, because you're doing something entirely different when you go to the adoration.

                "Need to visualize" is a complicated phrase. I prefer not to publically talk about anything that's not explicitly in the text of Liber Resh to alluded to by it, especially when there are things one can discover in the doing, or which change over time, or which are individual (three different categories <g>).

                Simple answer, though, is, "Yes, that's all that Resh mentions, right?"

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • A AliceKnewIt

                  Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                  Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                  My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                  Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                  One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                  As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                  Ra in the sun barque:
                  www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                  Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                  innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                  www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                  Model boat for a tomb:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                  artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                  ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                  Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                  www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                  www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                  www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                  www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                  (thanks to Lucero)

                  "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                  The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                  Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                  As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                  www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                  As a man with an Ibis head:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                  ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                  Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                  www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                  Tahuti as an ibis:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                  Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                  orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                  ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                  Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                  farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                  1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                  Photos of the African Baboon:
                  1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                  www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                  images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                  Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                  Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                  amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                  This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                  www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                  This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                  www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                  Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                  Horus as a falcon:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                  farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                  Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                  farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                  farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                  Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                  www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                  inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                  Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                  clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                  Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                  Hathor in human form:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                  Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                  www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                  Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                  farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                  Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                  farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                  mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                  Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                  Essay on Atum, with photos:
                  www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                  Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                  www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                  Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                  inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                  fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                  Atum - modern drawing
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                  Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                  Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                  img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                  www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                  Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                  Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                  www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                  Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                  farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                  The scarab in the sun barque:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                  www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                  Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                  www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                  Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                  commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                  1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                  fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                  It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                  Love is the law, love under will.

                  Q Offline
                  Q Offline
                  Quaestor Lucis
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #70

                  93!

                  I have problem with assumption of the Khephra god-form (Yea, man with the beetle head is really "CREEEEEEEPY", but it is not the case 😄 ) I can't understand, how speaks this god? I mean, from what hole?)

                  Mr. Eshelman, сould you tell, how do you assume this god-form?

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • A AliceKnewIt

                    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                    Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                    My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                    Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                    One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                    As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                    Ra in the sun barque:
                    www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                    Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                    innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                    www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                    Model boat for a tomb:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                    artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                    ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                    Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                    www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                    www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                    (thanks to Lucero)

                    "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                    The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                    Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                    As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                    www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                    As a man with an Ibis head:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                    ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                    Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                    www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                    Tahuti as an ibis:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                    Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                    orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                    ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                    Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                    farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                    1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                    Photos of the African Baboon:
                    1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                    www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                    images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                    Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                    Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                    amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                    This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                    This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                    Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                    Horus as a falcon:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                    farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                    Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                    farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                    farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                    Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                    www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                    inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                    Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                    clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                    Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                    Hathor in human form:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                    Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                    www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                    Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                    farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                    Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                    farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                    mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                    Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                    Essay on Atum, with photos:
                    www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                    Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                    www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                    Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                    inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                    fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                    Atum - modern drawing
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                    Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                    Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                    img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                    www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                    Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                    Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                    www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                    Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                    farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                    The scarab in the sun barque:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                    www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                    Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                    www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                    Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                    1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                    fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                    It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                    Love is the law, love under will.

                    J Offline
                    J Offline
                    Jim Eshelman
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #71

                    Usually as a full beetle. Beetles have mouths.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • A AliceKnewIt

                      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                      Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                      My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                      Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                      One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                      As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                      Ra in the sun barque:
                      www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                      Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                      innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                      www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                      Model boat for a tomb:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                      artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                      ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                      Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                      www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                      www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                      (thanks to Lucero)

                      "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                      The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                      Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                      As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                      www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                      As a man with an Ibis head:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                      ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                      Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                      www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                      Tahuti as an ibis:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                      Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                      orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                      ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                      Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                      farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                      1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                      Photos of the African Baboon:
                      1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                      www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                      images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                      Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                      Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                      amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                      This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                      This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                      Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                      Horus as a falcon:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                      farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                      Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                      farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                      farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                      Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                      www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                      inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                      Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                      clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                      Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                      Hathor in human form:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                      Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                      www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                      Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                      farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                      Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                      farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                      mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                      Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                      Essay on Atum, with photos:
                      www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                      Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                      www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                      Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                      inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                      fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                      Atum - modern drawing
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                      Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                      Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                      img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                      www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                      Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                      Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                      www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                      Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                      farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                      The scarab in the sun barque:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                      www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                      Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                      www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                      Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                      1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                      fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                      It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                      Love is the law, love under will.

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      ThelemicMage
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #72

                      If you've seen any Grateful Dead shirts with the winged beetle, Kephra, you will notice two little "grabbers" or pincers on the mouth.

                      Yes, I always have to make this type of reference, or half-morons won't turn into non-morons who go through enlightening websites.

                      🍸

                      What's really cool is during mid-day, you can take the god-form of a Cow. Chao. Kaos. Anyways, cows go "mu", and of course mu is the all-encompassing word meaning nothing or silence. Stand on your back, (or front) porch, and loudly proclaim "Mu!" Do this five times over seventy-three times for good luck, and ignore anyone who approaches you.

                      😄

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • A AliceKnewIt

                        Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                        Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                        My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                        Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                        One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                        As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                        Ra in the sun barque:
                        www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                        Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                        innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                        www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                        Model boat for a tomb:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                        artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                        ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                        Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                        www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                        www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                        (thanks to Lucero)

                        "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                        The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                        Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                        As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                        www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                        As a man with an Ibis head:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                        ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                        Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                        www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                        Tahuti as an ibis:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                        Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                        orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                        ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                        Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                        farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                        1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                        Photos of the African Baboon:
                        1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                        www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                        images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                        Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                        Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                        amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                        This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                        This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                        Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                        Horus as a falcon:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                        farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                        Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                        farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                        farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                        Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                        www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                        inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                        Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                        clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                        Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                        Hathor in human form:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                        Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                        www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                        Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                        farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                        Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                        farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                        mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                        Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                        Essay on Atum, with photos:
                        www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                        Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                        www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                        Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                        inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                        fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                        Atum - modern drawing
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                        Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                        Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                        img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                        www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                        Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                        Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                        www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                        Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                        farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                        The scarab in the sun barque:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                        www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                        Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                        www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                        Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                        commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                        1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                        fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                        It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                        Love is the law, love under will.

                        Z Offline
                        Z Offline
                        Zoasa
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #73

                        I have been a member since 2010, but come on very little I think that this is

                        A very nice understanding

                        @Frater Sabaechi said

                        "As humans evolve I think we will stop seperating ourselves from the Cosmos. We are each fractals of the whole, we are the Gods, Aliens and Demons of our past."

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • A AliceKnewIt

                          Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                          Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                          My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                          Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                          One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                          As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                          Ra in the sun barque:
                          www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                          Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                          innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                          www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                          Model boat for a tomb:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                          artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                          ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                          Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                          www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                          www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                          (thanks to Lucero)

                          "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                          The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                          Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                          As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                          www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                          As a man with an Ibis head:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                          ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                          Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                          www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                          Tahuti as an ibis:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                          Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                          orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                          ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                          Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                          farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                          1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                          Photos of the African Baboon:
                          1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                          www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                          images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                          Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                          Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                          amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                          This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                          This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                          Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                          Horus as a falcon:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                          farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                          Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                          farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                          farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                          Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                          www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                          inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                          Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                          clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                          Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                          Hathor in human form:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                          Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                          www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                          Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                          farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                          Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                          farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                          mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                          Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                          Essay on Atum, with photos:
                          www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                          Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                          www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                          Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                          inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                          fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                          Atum - modern drawing
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                          Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                          Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                          img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                          www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                          Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                          Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                          www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                          Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                          farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                          The scarab in the sun barque:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                          www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                          Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                          www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                          Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                          commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                          1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                          fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                          It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                          Love is the law, love under will.

                          Z Offline
                          Z Offline
                          Zoasa
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #74

                          @Quaestor Lucis said

                          "93!

                          I have problem with assumption of the Khephra god-form (Yea, man with the beetle head is really "CREEEEEEEPY", but it is not the case 😄 ) I can't understand, how speaks this god? I mean, from what hole?)

                          Mr. Eshelman, сould you tell, how do you assume this god-form?"

                          The Picture is a picture.... Assumption is assumption. How you speak is irrelevant. Sometimes I think that my head is the head of the beetle and other times I try to see myself as others would see me as Khephra (the picture). Either way it does not matter as long as it comes from your mouth.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • A AliceKnewIt

                            Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

                            Liber Resh is not an ancient Egyptian ritual, though it is inspired by ancient Egypt.

                            My main purpose here is to post some images of what the Gods in Liber Resh look like. Most Gods have more than one form. According to Erik Hornung, the ancient Egyptians did not take these forms as literal pictures of what the Gods looked like, but rather as a hieroglyph or symbolic characterization of their nature.

                            Many Egyptian Gods have human bodies with animal heads. This form has its origins in a priest or shaman wearing an animal mask, in predynastic times.

                            One must keep in mind the conventions of two-dimensional Egyptian art. For example, Egyptian conventions in art show the face in profile, while the crown on the top of the head is sometimes shown in front view, sometimes in profile, depending on the style of the crown. When I can, I will also show a sculptural version of the God.


                            As a river people, one image Egyptians had was of the Sun as a boat floating across the sky. The boat, or barque, is usually shown as something fairly simple. The images I have of this sun barque are not exactly like the description in Liber Resh, as Liber Resh does not follow Egyptian mythology exactly.

                            Ra in the sun barque:
                            www.histoire-fr.com/images/ra_barque_solaire_apophis_thot.gif

                            Ra in the sun barque, with the benu bird (phoenix) Tomb at Deir el Medina:
                            innemedium.pl/sites/default/files/imagecache/400naszerokosc/images/mlw_0001_0004_0_img0171.jpg
                            www.dinosoria.com/egypte/re.jpg

                            Model boat for a tomb:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_barque_model_Louvre.jpg
                            artnc.org/sites/default/files/EGYPTIAN,%20Model%20of%20a%20Boat,%2082_12,%20view%20A_0.jpg
                            ihathor.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/egyptian_barque_model_louvre.jpg

                            Khufu's Solar Boat found by the Great Pyramid:
                            www.phouka.com/pharaoh/egypt/photos/giza/solarBoat-01.html
                            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/greatpyramid5.htm
                            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/solar.htm
                            www.peccator.no/Images/By_Time_Place-Ancient/02egyptian/01/DOT_Egypt_Giza_Sun_Boat_1.jpg
                            (thanks to Lucero)

                            "Tahuti standeth in His splendour at the prow, and Ra-Hoor abideth at the helm."
                            The prow is the front of the boat, the helm is tiller to steer the boat at the back.


                            Tahuti is more commonly known as Thoth, which is what the Greeks called him. “Tahuti” is the Victorian rending of the Egyptian name for the God. Contemporary Egyptologists use “Djehuty”. Tahuti can be in the form of an Ibis, a man with the head of an ibis, or a baboon. Tahuti is the God of the moon, of writing, and of knowledge.

                            As a man with an Ibis head, in the Papyrus of Hunefer:
                            www.archaeowiki.org/Image:Thoth_%28detail%29_Papyrus_of_Hunefer.jpg

                            As a man with an Ibis head:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth.jpg
                            ravel.webshots.com/photo/1033326393033137413gfCpni

                            Tahuti enthroned, tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                            www.delange.org/Nefertari/nef6.jpg

                            Tahuti as an ibis:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:-332_Hieroglyphe_Thoth_anagoria.JPG
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ibis_of_the_God_Thoth.jpg

                            Photos of the sacred Ibis:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:African_Sacred_Ibis_RWD.jpg
                            orientalbirdimages.org/images/data/african_sacred_ibis_001.jpg
                            ibc.lynxeds.com/files/pictures/African_Sacred_Ibis_MG_6948_Pat_Ayling.jpg

                            Statues of Tahuti as a baboon:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_-Thoth-Baboon-_Walters_481543.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thoth_as_baboo_E17496.jpg
                            farm9.staticflickr.com/8453/8072261542_46960966e8_o.jpg
                            1.bp.blogspot.com/-odGv8Wmwadw/TZkbieUIXCI/AAAAAAAAAaQ/AUJiiOL8CkE/s1600/baboon.jpg

                            Photos of the African Baboon:
                            1.bp.blogspot.com/-jxN-GlntA30/UWaK-y4kK6I/AAAAAAAAAZg/77sxH7CZ2RA/s1600/baboon+Rodin.jpg
                            www.dsphotographic.com/g2/12654-3/Baboons+-009.jpg
                            images.travelpod.com/users/jonclark2000/africa-05-06.1140685380.baboon.jpg


                            Ra-Hoor is called “Re-Horakhty” by Egyptologists today. He is a syncretic God, which means he is a combination of two Gods. It is the idea of one God “inhabiting” another. In this case, Ra, (or Re, alternative spelling) is inhabiting Horakhty “Horus-of-the-two-horizons” – referring to the rising and setting sun. Confusingly, Ra and Re-Horakhty look exactly the same most of the time. You can only tell them apart from reading the inscription. He is a man with the head of a falcon, with the red sun disk surrounded by a cobra on top of his head. In two dimensional art, the sun disk is a front view but the cobra is shown side view.

                            Of course, the Stele of Revealing shows Ra-Hoor:
                            amesa.abrahadabra.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/stele.jpg

                            This site has a couple of pictures of Ra and Re-Horakhty with an essay:
                            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/re.htm

                            This essay on syncretism has some nice images of Re-Horakhty:
                            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sync.htm

                            Lady of the West and Re-Horakhty in the tomb of Queen Nefertari:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Maler_der_Grabkammer_der_Nefertari_001.jpg

                            Horus as a falcon:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_Falcon1_(retouched.jpg
                            farm1.static.flickr.com/152/435580385_3e2f9aa178.jpg?v=0
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-schmuela-_IMG_7082.jpg

                            Horus as a falcon, sculpture:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt.Edfu.Temple.01.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egyptian_Falcon_(Le_Louvre_(8225557913).jpg
                            farm1.static.flickr.com/240/459924227_025744a752.jpg?v=0
                            farm1.static.flickr.com/247/452745893_c6e1935443.jpg?v=0

                            Photo of the Lanner falcon, Egypt:
                            www.netcore.ca/~peleetom/Lanner%20Falcon.jpg
                            inyurl.com/ybxhat6

                            Realistic painting of a Horus falcon by Fen Lansdowne, click on the upper left painting:
                            clicks.robertgenn.com/larks-owls.ph


                            Hathor is a mother Goddess, and also the Goddess of love, beauty, music and dance. She can also take a very fierce form, as the Eye of Re. She is frequently depicted as a woman with the sun disk on her head with two cow’s horns. She is also a cow, and less often, a woman with a cow head. She is also shown as a woman with the ears of a cow on the capital of pillars, and the handles of mirrors.

                            Hathor in human form:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hathor_y_Seti_I.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dendera_Römisches_Mammisi_21b.jpg
                            Hathor & Queen Nefertari: Hathor is on the left, with a sun disk and cow horns on her head, Queen Nefertari on the right with a vulture crown.
                            www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/Nefertari/hathor.nofretari.jpeg

                            Hathor heads - face of a woman with cow's ears:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S_F-E-CAMERON_EGYPT_2006_HATSHEPSUT00195.JPG
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ny_Carlsberg_Glyptothek_-_Hathor.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_703.jpg
                            farm3.static.flickr.com/2090/1773700164_488d2ffc87.jpg?v=0

                            Hathor as the Heavenly Cow:
                            farm4.staticflickr.com/3160/2931264377_8d89cde09e_o.jpg
                            mifflin.soaringweb.org/images/EGYPT/Egypt_4008_1536x1042.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BD_Hathor_Mistress_of_the_West.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Head_of_Hathor_.jpg


                            Tum, more commonly known as Atum, was a man, sometimes crowned as a king, other times without the crown. He was a creator God.

                            Essay on Atum, with photos:
                            www.touregypt.net/featurestories/atum.htm

                            Osiris & Atum, Tomb of Nefertari.: Osiris is on the left, with green skin, Atum is on the right, with the double crown of a Pharaoh.
                            www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/03_Egyptian/1200s-BC_Tomb-of-Nefertari_Atum+Osiris_GGW-039.jpg

                            Statue of Pharaoh Horemheb worshipping Atum:
                            inyurl.com/bmjc5e
                            fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/390541_493235554038496_1771113533_n.jpg

                            Atum - modern drawing
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atum.svg


                            Khephra, also spelled Khephera, Khephri, was a scarab beetle. This beetle lays its eggs in dung, which it then rolls into a ball. So another conception the Egyptian had of the sun was of a ball of dung rolled by a great beetle across the sky. Khephra could be depicted as simply a beetle, or as a man with a beetle for a head. (I like to think of him as a man with a beetle mask.) The scarab beetle was also much used as an amulet, by the living and the dead.

                            Here is Khephra, as a man with a beetle head:
                            img2.allposters.com/images/BRGPOD/218239.jpg
                            www.crystalinks.com/khepri.html

                            Scarab Amulet from King Tutankhamen,
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tutankhamun_scarab1.jpg

                            Breastplate amulet from the mummy of King Tutankhamen, Scarab in Sun Boat, with Tahuti on each side:
                            www.blingdomofgod.com/entryimages/scarab_pec_cover-thumb.jpg

                            Winged Scarab amulet from the mummy of King Tut – actually hieroglyphs spelling his name:
                            farm1.static.flickr.com/130/420305412_96b98ad055.jpg?v=0

                            The scarab in the sun barque:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nun_Raises_the_Sun.jpg
                            www.uux.cn/attachments/2011/06/1_201106301006241UkhG.jpg

                            Statue of the scarab at Karnak temple:
                            www.planetware.com/i/photo/granite-scarab-karnak-egy291.jpg

                            Photos of the beetle species, scarabaeus sacer:
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.sacer.jpg
                            commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scarabaeus.JPG
                            1068.photobucket.com/user/linnaeus1758/media/917779365.jpg.html
                            fw.so/uploads/posts/2012-06/1340025822_1.jpg

                            It's not just any beetle, it's a specific species. They are quite large, and they can fly. They come out in the summertime. They aren't as common in Egypt today as they were in ancient times.


                            Love is the law, love under will.

                            Z Offline
                            Z Offline
                            Zoasa
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #75

                            I really appreciate the pictures AliceKnewIt

                            Sorry I have not been on a long time.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0

                            • Login

                            • Don't have an account? Register

                            • Login or register to search.
                            • First post
                              Last post
                            0
                            • Categories
                            • Recent
                            • Tags
                            • Popular
                            • Users
                            • Groups