Neb-taui-djeser
Neb-taui-djeser in hieroglyphics | ||||
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mostly |
Neb-ta-djeser Nb-t3-ḏsr Lord of the Holy Land |
Neb-taui-djeser (also Neb- ta-djeser ) was the first god of the first hour from the first register in the Amduat in ancient Egypt and is already attested as the god of the dead in the old kingdom .
Neb-taui-djeser is represented in human form standing at an altar with two knives. As the fourth of 20 manifestations of Anubis , it appears iconographically as a mummy with a donkey , dog or jackal head .
Neb-taui-djeser represents the fifth of 36 gods of the 18th Upper Egyptian district , the eleventh of 19 gods in the book of the day and is one of the “gods of the flame” who rule in the southern sky .
In addition, in Egyptian mythology , Neb-taui-djeser has connections to Atum as the 16th of 61 figures of the sun god .
See also
literature
- Christian Leitz u. a .: Lexicon of Egyptian gods and names of gods , Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta 112, Vol. 3: P - nbw . Peeters, Leuven 2002, ISBN 90-429-1148-4 , p. 774.