Amun-Min-Ra at Thebes
|
|||||||||
|
Amun-Ra-Min became a composite god as his cult spread over Egypt and subsumed other gods Originally, he was the deification of the concept of air, and one of the four fundamental concepts of the primordial universe in the Ogdoad Creation Myth. Amun means the hidden one, as the air and the wind is not seen. His original depiction was a frog-headed god and his invisibility was represented by the color blue, the color of the sky. The color blue is often used for Amun's image. As the god of air, he came to be associated with the breath of life, which created the ba, particularly in Thebes. By the First Intermediate Period he was known as the creator god, titled Father of the Gods, in Thebes. As the crator god, his Theban wife was the local Devine Mother Mut. Amun, the creator god, was depicted in human form, seated on a throne, wearing on his head a circlet from which rise two straight parallel plumes.
|
|
|||||||
Explore Egypt | Egypt Legends | Egypt Gods | Egypt Cult Centers | Egypt Creation Myths |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||