Aker
|
The double lion god, guardian of the sunrise and sunset. Guardian of the peaks that supported the sky
|
Amaunet
|
Means "Hidden One." She was an Egyptian mother and/or fertility goddess. At the beginning of time aspects of her merged with those of the goddess Neith. Among the Ogdoad, Amun was her consort.
|
Am-heh
|
Egyptian chthonic underworld god
|
Ammut (Ammit)
|
"Devouress of the Dead." Demonic goddess who attends the Judging of the Dead.
|
Amun
|
"The Hidden One." An Egyptian sky god who evolved into a sun god and the head of the Egyptian pantheon.
|
Amun-Re ( Amon-Ra )
|
A combination of Amun and Ra worshipped in later Egyptian history. Under this name, the Theban god Amun became the national god of Egypt.
|
Anat
|
A goddess of Syrian origin. She had a warlike character. She usually was represented as a woman holding a shield and an axe
|
Andjety ( Anezti, Anedjti )
|
Egyptian underworld god. Andjety was responsible for the rebirth of the individual in the afterlife. He wore a high conical crown surmounted by two feather plumes, and bore the crook and flail
|
Anentet ( Amenthes )
|
Egyptian goddess of the West. The west was considered to be the Underworld
|
Anezti ( Anedjti )
|
A god of the ninth Nome of Lower Egypt
|
Anhur
|
Egyptian warrior and hunter god. His consort was the lion goddess Mekhit. He was depicted as a bearded warrior wearing a long robe and a headdress with four tall plumes, often bearing a spear
|
Anti
|
An Egyptian guardian deity. Depicted as a falcon or with a falcon's head, often standing on a crescent-shaped boat
|
Anubis
|
An Egyptian god of the dead. Also known as Khenty-Imentiu - "Chief of the Westerners" - a reference to the belief that the realm of the dead lay to the west and a association with the setting sun
|
Anuket
|
Egyptian goddess who personified the Nile as Nourisher of the Fields. She was mainly associated with the lower cataracts near Aswan. Also was a protective deity of childbirth.
|
Apedemak
|
A Nubian Lion god
|
Apis
|
Egyptian bull god of Memphis. Originally a form the god Hapi, he was later regarded as the living embodiment of the god Ptah. He was supposedly conceived after a flash of lightning struck Isis.
|