Egyptian mythology: The Pharaoh's Guardian Horus

Horus is the guardian god of the ancient Egyptian myth, the symbol of kingship.

His image is the god of a hawk.

Like many other gods, Horus' stories and legends have been changing with history.

Horus can be seen as a conglomerate of many other gods associated with the throne, the sky and so on.

And most of these gods are sun god.

This is very similar to what Christianity says about the triad of God.

Heru-ur (Hammerdi) was the first version of Horus, a falcon God.

His eyes are sun and moon.

When the new moon appeared, he became a blind man called Mekhenty-er-irty, meaning “person without eyes”, and when his vision recovered, he was called Khenty-irty, meaning “person with eyes”.

The blind Horus was dangerous when he misperceived his friends and attacked.

He is the son of Gabe and Nut, the guardian of Letopolis.

Welcome to this station, and you must note the domain name of Horus of childhood, known as Har-pa-khered, which means "Horace, the young child," the son of Osiris and Isis.

He was portrayed as a naked boy with a finger on his hand, sitting with his mother on a lotus flower.

This form of Horus is a birthing god who carries a poach.

During the Roman Empire, Horus was widely portrayed as riding a goose or a ram (his father was a ram god).

Three thousand B.C., Seth replaced Horus as the guardian of Pharaoh.

However, when the legend of Sate's murder of his brother spread, Horus was replaced.

There was an 80-year-long fighting between Horus and Set.

Horus pulled out the testicles and a leg of Seth, and Sette dug out Horus' left eye (which has since been called the "one-eyed").

Horus later took his eyes.

With the support of Nate, Horus won the battle and became the ruler of Upper and Lower Egypt (and also legends of Horus and Sets in Upper and Lower Egypt).

Horus had four sons who, in the Egyptian faith in the funeral, held the organs of the deceased in four jars: Domtev (tummy), Kebsanaf (intestine), Habi (pulmonary) and Amshet (liver)。

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