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Bastet – Mythopedia Bastet was the cat-headed Egyptian goddess who guarded pregnant women and served as a manifestation of the Eye of Ra Originally a ferocious lioness, her image softened over time, although she retained her fierce protectiveness
Poetic Edda: Rigsthula (Full Text) - Mythopedia With bast he bound, and burdens carried, Home bore faggots the whole day long [10] One came to their home, crooked her legs, Stained were her feet, and sunburned her arms, Flat was her nose; her name was Thir [11] Soon in the midst of the room she sat, By her side there sat the son of the house; They whispered both, and the bed made ready,
Hathor – Mythopedia Hathor was the cow-headed Egyptian goddess of love, marriage and motherhood Like most long-worshiped deities she performed numerous mythological roles, including massacring the enemies of Ra, healing Horus, and nourishing the dead in the afterlife
Devil Names - Mythopedia Devil names: Origin, structure, and meaning Evil to the core and up to no good, devils have a long history in religions, mythologies, legends, and histories across cultures from Judeo-Christianity to the many cultures of Asia Like demons, devils open up all sorts of evil possibilities for villains in literature or movies, ranging from Satan in Paradise Lost to the titular character of the
Poetic Edda: Völundarkvitha (Full Text) - Mythopedia And rings he strung on ropes of bast; So for his wife he waited long, If the fair one home might come to him [9] This Nithuth learned, the lord of the Njars, That Völund alone in Ulfdalir lay; By night went his men, their mail-coats were studded, Their shields in the waning moonlight shone [10] From their saddles the gable wall they sought,
Egyptian Gods – Mythopedia Egyptian gods and goddesses were incarnations of both natural phenomena, such as the sun, and social phenomena, like knowledge Egypt itself was ruled by a pharaoh who claimed to be the gods’ representative on earth, and who acted as a mediator between mankind and the divine