Who is nut the egyptian goddess
She was part of the cosmogony a theory of the origin of the universe of Heliopolis. The ancient Egyptians believed that she protected the Earth deity Geb, her husband, from the night sky. Myths also state that the sun deity Ra traveled through her - she swallowed him at night and then gave birth to him every morning. Nut Nuit, Nwt was the personification of the sky and the heavens. She was the daughter Shu and Tefnut and the granddaughter of the creator god Atum or Ra.
However, she could also be said to be the mother of Ra. In one myth Nut gives birth to the Sun-god daily and he passes over her body during the day before being swallowed at night only to be reborn the next morning.
According to another myth Ra used the Atet or Matet boat to travel across her body until noon and then used the Sektet boat until sunset. Apparently, Ra became annoyed because Geb and Nut were locked in a perpetual embrace so he asked Shu to separate them. Nut was often referred as a cow goddess who got some of the qualities of Hathor. She is more commonly represented as a naked woman covered with stars and her body is held in an arch facing downwards. Her legs and arms are the pillars of the sky and the feet and hands touch the ground at four cardinal points on the horizon.
Geb is often depicted beneath Nut. Because of her association with the rebirth of the sun, Nut became a mother-like figure and protector of the dead whose picture was painted on the inside lid of the sarcophagus in order to protect the mummy.
There were many festivals dedicated in the honor of Nut and celebrated throughout Egypt such as "the Festival of Nut and Ra" and the "Feast of Nut. The myth of Nut swallowing the Sun god at the end of the day and giving birth to him again at the start of next morning is very famous and many variations of the myth are told in Egyptian mythology.
English German. The sycamore tree, representing protection and eternity, is another symbol associated with Nut. Nut was also a protector goddess, namely a protector of the dead. The Pyramid Texts contain many prayers to Nut to ask for protection for those who have died. A picture of Nut was often painted on the inside of a coffin sarcophagus to protect the dead. Sometimes she is pictured with protective wings, and other times the symbol of the ladder was used to depict her.
Many examples of these can be seen at the Cairo Museum. The chief cult center for Nut was at Heliopolis, but she was also worshiped as a healing goddess in Memphis at a shrine called the House of Nut.
No known temples were built exclusively for her. Family She is the daughter of Shu and Tefnut, and both sister and wife to Geb, the earth god.
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