Front page - Gods - Egyptian Temples - History of Religion - Priesthood - Rituals - Creation Myths - Women



  Per-Ankh  



The House of Life




The Creation Myths

The Ennead of Heliopolis, part I - The Ennead of Heliopolis, part II - The Benu Bird, the Prototype Phoenix

- Amun, Creator at Thebes - Ptah of Memphis - The Ogdoad of Hermopolis - Khnum of Elephantine - Nit - Creatrix


The Ennead (Pesdjet) of Heliopolis

Part II: The Passion of Osiris.

When Nut gave birth to Osiris, Seth, Isis, and Nephtys it linked the elder cosmic deities to the younger god Osiris whose worship was in the rising (he is not not known before Dyn V), making him the great grandson of the creator god and putting emphasis on the divinity of the king and the political world, and thereby the world of myth became complete and logical.

The Passion of Osiris

The Passion of Osiris probably began in early times as a set of fertility rites. Later the emotional content took overhand and as such it remained, from the 3rd millennium B.C. throughout Ptolemaic texts from Philae or Dendera. To begin to understand why this drama was so important and so thightly knitted to the question of kingship, we must realize that for the ancient Egyptian the agricultural year was not as benign as in Western and European countries. The peoples there had a basic knowledge that even if there were bad years with failing of crops and famine, the new growth would always return next year so the whole of existence was not totally threatened.

For the ancient Egyptian it was different. The drought and heat of summer meant that the fertile strip of land by the Nile turned into desert, which for them equalled the place of death. The ordered world where life could prosper, turned every year into chaos and barrenness. Their world disappeared and they were never really sure that the flood would come back and in sufficient amount.

The Inundation or Sopdet

Sirius, or the Dog Star, in Egypt called Sopdet (Gr: Sothis), was believed to bring the inundation. In later times it was equalled to Isis. The inundation returned at the same time as Sopdet became visible above the horizon after 70 days of absence, it meant literally that death and destruction was staved off. And the inherent life force that was brought back by the inundation was Osiris. He is what sprouts when the water irrgate the fields but he can only do this with the help of Isis, i.e Sopdet. And now there is time to rejoice!:

"I am the messenger of the year, for Osiris,
herer I come with the news of your father, Geb,
The state of the year is good, how good it is!
The state of the year is fair, how fair it is!
I have come down with the Twin Companies of the gods
provider of the fields with plenty;
I have found the gods standing, clothed in their linen,
their white sandals upon their feet.
They throw off their sandals upon the ground,
they divest themselves of their fine linen;
`There was no happiness until you came down!`they say.
`What is told you will abide with you!´
Canal of happiness will be the name ofthis canal
as it floods the fields with plenty."

Pyramid Texts

The reason for the popularity of the cult was probably that people could identify with the sufferings of Osiris and Isis. Apart from the emotional content of the story of the Passion (we will look at that later), here is a whole chain of reasons for celebrating Osiris. He was:

  • 1: Fourth generation of gods as the great grandson of Atum,
  • 2: King over Egypt in a past golden age, and teacher of cultivation, order and justice (since the Middle Kingdom),
  • 3: Victim of his brother Set,
  • 4: By the intervention of Isis, Father of the next King and Ruler of the Underworld,
  • 5: Bringer of the powers of life by the means of his son Horus.


So the Passion of Osiris wraps it all up. All the mythic content is knit together to form the basis for the theocratic rulership of the land. In Egypt duality was always present and here we have Osiris and Horus functioning as two parts of a whole, in a complementary relationship: Without his son Horus, Osiris would not be redeemed, and without his father Osiris, Horus would not be able to assume rulership over Egypt. In this way the myth certifies and supports the Divine Rulership over Egypt. Most coronation ceremonies also brought out elements of the myth to confirm Pharao as the Living Horus and rightful King of Egypt.

In the table below you can see the concept or idea behind each of the deities, from the primeval waters to the King of Egypt.(After Hart)



NUN Primeval Waters
ATUM Sun god - Monad
SHU Air
TEFNUT Moisture
GEB Earth = Egypt
NUT Sky = Barrier to Nun
OSIRIS Underworld King
ISIS Throne of Egypt
SETH Chaos
NEPHTYS Companion of ISIS
HORUS King of Egypt


Myths about Isis, Osiris & Horus.




Other Creation Myths:

The Ennead of Heliopolis, part I
The Ennead of Heliopolis, part II
The Benu Bird, the prototype Phoenix
Amun, Creator at Thebes
Ptah of Memphis
The Ogdoad of Hermopolis
Khmun and the Potter's Wheel
Nit - Female Creatrix


Sources:
Myth and Symbol in Ancient Egypt by R.T. Rundle Clark, Thames & Hudson, pbk 1993.
Egyptian Myths by George Hart, British Museum Press, 1997.
Conceptions of God in Ancient Egypt by Erik Hornung, Cornell Paperbacks, 1996.
Ancient Egyptian Literature by Miriam Lichtheim, University of California Press, 1976.
The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Egypt by Manfred Lurker, Thames & Hudson, 1995.
Religion in Ancient Egypt, edited by Byron E. Shafer, Cornell University Press, 1991.
Ancient Egyptian Religion by Stephen Quirke, British Museum Press, 1992



Copyright 2000 - 2006. All Rights Reserved.
These pages are for education only.

Contact:

mailknapp



Front page - Gods - Egyptian Temples - History of Religion - Priesthood - Rituals - Creation Myths - Women