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Taweret

In Ancient Egyptian religion, Taweret (Ancient Egyptian: tꜣ-wrt, also spelled Taurt, Tuat, Tuart, Ta-weret, Tawaret, Twert and Taueret, and in Ancient Greek: Θουέρις, romanizedThouéris, Thoeris, Taouris and Toeris) is the protective ancient Egyptian goddess of childbirth and fertility. The name "Taweret" means "she who is great" or simply "great one", a common pacificatory address to dangerous deities.[1] The deity is typically depicted as a bipedal female hippopotamus with feline attributes, pendulous female human breasts, the limbs and paws of a lion, and the back and tail of a Nile crocodile. She commonly bears the epithets "Lady of Heaven", "Mistress of the Horizon", "She Who Removes Water", "Mistress of Pure Water", and "Lady of the Birth House".[2]

Taweret
The goddess Taweret, portrayed as a bipedal hippopotamus with limbs like those of a feline. Her hand rests on the sa sign, 𓎃, a hieroglyph that means 'protection' or 'lifesaver'.
Name in hieroglyphs

Major cult centerNot applicable; Taweret was a household deity worshipped throughout Egypt.
Symbolthe sa, ivory dagger, hippopotamus
Images of protective deities like Taweret and Bes were placed on the outer walls of Ptolemaic temples in order to keep evil forces at bay. Edfu, Egypt.

History and development edit

Archaeological evidence demonstrates that hippopotamuses inhabited the Nile well before the dawn of Early Dynastic Period (before 3000 BCE). The violent and aggressive behavior of these creatures intrigued the people that inhabited the region, leading the ancient Egyptians both to persecute and to venerate them. From a very early age, male hippopotamuses were thought to be manifestations of chaos; consequently, they were overcome in royal hunting campaigns, intended to demonstrate the divine power of the king.[3] However, female hippopotamuses were revered as manifestations of apotropaic deities, as they studiously protect their young from harm. Protective amulets bearing the likenesses of female hippopotamuses have been found dating as far back as the Predynastic period (c. 3000–2686 BCE). The tradition of making and wearing these amulets continued throughout the history of Egypt into the Ptolemaic Kingdom and the Roman period (c. 332 BCE – 390 CE).[4]

 
Faience statuette of Taweret, her hands resting on the sa.

From her ideological conception, Taweret was closely grouped with (and is often indistinguishable from) several other protective hippopotamus goddesses: Ipet, Reret, and Hedjet. Some scholars even interpret these goddesses as aspects of the same deity, considering their universally shared role as protective household goddesses. The other hippopotamus goddesses have names that bear very specific meanings, much like Taweret (whose name is formed as a pacificatory address intended to calm the ferocity of the goddess): Ipet's name ("the Nurse") demonstrates her connection to birth, child rearing, and general caretaking, and Reret's name ("the Sow") is derived from the Egyptians' classification of hippopotami as water pigs. However, the origin of Hedjet's name ("the White One") is not as clear and could justly be debated.[5] Evidence for the cult of hippopotamus goddesses exists from the time of the Old Kingdom (c. 2686 – 2181 BCE) in the corpus of ancient Egyptian funerary texts entitled the Pyramid Texts. Spell 269 in the Pyramid Texts mentions Ipet and succinctly demonstrates her nurturing role; the spell announces that the deceased king will suck on the goddess's "white, dazzling, sweet milk" when he ascends to the heavens.[6] As maternal deities, these goddesses served to nurture and protect the Egyptian people, both royal (as seen in the Pyramid Texts) and non-royal.

 
Faience hippopotamus statuettes like this one were placed in tombs and temples to help the deceased be successfully reborn into the afterlife. Brooklyn, Brooklyn Museum.

It was not until the Middle Kingdom of Egypt (c. 2055–1650 BCE) that Taweret became featured more prominently as a figure of religious devotion. Her image adorns magical objects, the most notable of which being a common type of "wand" or "knife" carved from hippopotamus ivory that was likely used in rituals associated with birth and the protection of infants. Similar images appear also on children's feeding cups, once again demonstrating Taweret's integral role as the patron goddess of child rearing.[7] Quite contrarily, she also took on the role of a funerary deity in this period, evidenced by the commonplace practice of placing hippopotami decorated with marsh flora in tombs and temples. Some scholars believe that this practice demonstrates that hippopotamus goddesses facilitated the process of rebirth after death, just as they aided in earthly births. These statues, then, assisted the deceased's passing into the afterlife.[8]

 
Faience amulet depicting Taweret, Late Period (c. 600-400 BCE), held in the Louvre Museum, Paris.

With the rise of popular piety in the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1069 BCE), household deities like Taweret gained even more importance. Taweret's image has been found on an array of household objects, demonstrating her central role in the home. In fact, such objects were even found at Amarna from the reign of Akhenaten (c. 1352–1336 BCE), a pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty who reorganized ancient Egyptian religion into a monotheistic religion focused on the worship of the sun disc, called the Aten. The worship of many traditional gods was proscribed during this period, so Taweret's survival in the artistic corpus found at the Aten's capital demonstrates her overwhelming significance in daily life.[9] In this time period, her role as a funerary deity was strengthened, as her powers became considered not only life-giving, but regenerative as well. Various myths demonstrate her role in facilitating the afterlives of the deceased as the nurturing and purifying "Mistress of Pure Water".[8] However, Taweret and her fellow hippopotamus goddesses of fertility should not be confused with Ammit, another composite hippopotamus goddess who gained prominence in the New Kingdom. Ammit was responsible for devouring the unjust before passing into the afterlife. Unlike Ammit, the other hippopotamus goddesses were responsible for nourishment and aid, not destruction.

In the Ptolemaic and Roman periods (c. 332 BCE – 390 CE), Taweret maintained a central role in daily Egyptian life. In either the latter half of the Late Period (c. 664–332 BCE) or the early Ptolemaic period, a temple dedicated to Ipet was built at Karnak. This enigmatic temple was thought to witness the daily birth of the sun god from the hippopotamus goddesses that dwelled there. The sun god (Amun-Re) was conceived of as having multiple divine mothers, and by this later period in Egyptian history, Taweret and the other hippopotamus goddesses were included in this body of solar mothers.[8] Taweret's image also appeared on the outside of temples dedicated to other deities due to her apotropaic ability to ward off malevolent forces.[9] Outside of temple settings, the household cult of the goddesses remained strong, and amulets bearing their likenesses peaked in popularity during these years.

Outside of Egypt edit

Taweret developed a significant cult outside of Egypt as well. In the Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE), economic and minimal political contact with the Asiatic cultures of the Levant led to the exchange of ideologies. Taweret was adopted into Levantine religions, serving the same maternal role in these foreign pantheons.

Ancient Crete edit

Due to communication between Levantine coastal towns and Mediterranean localities, Taweret also became an integral part of Minoan religion in Crete, where it is known as the Minoan Genius.

Like in Egypt, her image was featured most prominently on protective amulets. However, this image was altered slightly from the Egyptian one, as she was folded into the corpus of Minoan iconography in an artistic style that was congruent with other Minoan images. From Crete, this image spread to mainland Greece, where the goddess was featured in palatine art in Mycenae.[10]

In Nubia edit

 
This clay statuette of Taweret was found in a foundation deposit under the enclosure wall of the pyramid of the Nubian King Anlamani (c. 623–595 BCE). Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The goddess was also adopted by the Nubians, the empire that lay directly south of Egypt in what is now Sudan. Like her Minoan counterpart, the Nubian Taweret became a part of the Nubian pantheon in the late Middle Kingdom of Egypt. She was evidently featured in royal rituals at Kerma, the capital of the empire.[11]

Phoenicia edit

There is a connection to the Phoenician goddess of pregnancy Dea Gravida.[12]

In mythology edit

Although Ipet (aka Apet or Aptet) is mentioned in the Old Kingdom Pyramid Texts, and Taweret is seen frequently on Middle Kingdom ritual objects, hippopotamus goddesses did not gain a significant role in Egyptian mythology until the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1069 BCE). Taweret is featured in some versions of a popular and widespread myth in which the Eye of Ra becomes angry with her father and retreats to Nubia in the form of a lioness. Upon the Eye of Ra's eventual return to Egypt, she assumes the form of a hippopotamus (presumably Taweret) and consequently brings the flooding of the Nile. This myth demonstrates Taweret's primary function as a goddess of fertility and rejuvenation. Some scholars feel that her role in the Nile inundation is one of the reasons she was given the epithet "Mistress of Pure Water". However, her similar role in the rejuvenation of the dead also cannot be overlooked with regards to this epithet – just as she provided life for the living through physical birth and the inundation, she also cleansed and purified the dead so they could pass safely into the afterlife.[13]

 
Detail of the astronomical ceiling in the tomb of Seti I. A celestial form of Taweret can be seen in the far right.
 
This image (c. 1463 BCE) shows the astronomical ceiling of Senemut's tomb. A celestial form of Taweret can be seen towards the bottom in the center.

In the New Kingdom Taweret's image was frequently used to represent a northern constellation in zodiacs. This image is attested in several astronomical tomb paintings, including the Theban tombs of Tharwas (tomb 353), Hatshepsut's famed advisor Senenmut (tomb 232), and the pharaoh Seti I (KV17) in the Valley of the Kings.[9] The image of this astral Taweret appears almost exclusively next to the Setian foreleg of a bull. The latter image represents the Big Dipper and is associated with the Egyptian god of chaos, Seth. The relationship between the two images is discussed in the Book of Day and Night (a cosmically focused mythological text from the Twentieth Dynasty, c. 1186–1069 BCE) as follows: "As to this foreleg of Seth, it is in the northern sky, tied down to two mooring posts of flint by a chain of gold. It is entrusted to Isis as a hippopotamus guarding it."[14] Although the hippopotamus goddess is identified in this text as Isis, not Taweret, this phenomenon is not uncommon in later periods of Egyptian history. When assuming a protective role, powerful goddesses like Isis, Hathor, and Mut assumed the form of Taweret, effectively becoming a manifestation of this goddess. Likewise, Taweret gradually absorbed qualities of these goddesses and is commonly seen wearing the Hathoric sun disc that is iconographically associated with both Hathor and Isis.[8]

This cosmic image continues to be seen in later periods, although the tendency was to show such divine astral bodies more abstractly. One example can be found in the late Ptolemaic or early Roman Book of the Faiyum, a local monograph dedicated to the Faiyum and its patron gods, namely Sobek-Re. Taweret is depicted in her standard form with a crocodile on her back and a small upright crocodile in her right hand. She is shown in the section of the papyrus that is meant to depict the Faiyum's central Lake Moeris. The papyrus depicts the solar journey of Re with Lake Moeris as the place into which the sun god descends for his nightly journey, traditionally thought of as the underworldly realm of the Amduat. Taweret appears here as a well known constellation to demonstrate the celestial and otherworldly properties of Lake Moeris. She also serves as a fine protective divine mother to Sobek-Re during his precarious journey. In this respect, she fulfills the role of Neith, the primary divine mother of Sobek. This Taweret figure is labeled as "Neith the Great, who protects her son", demonstrating the malleability of the hippopotamus goddess form. When in the role of a protective mother, it is not uncommon that other goddesses would appear in the form of Taweret.[15]

Taweret was featured in other myths as well during these later periods. In the famed Metternich Stela, Isis tells Horus that he was reared by a "sow and a dwarf", almost certainly referring to Taweret and her fellow apotropaic demon-god Bes, respectively. Although the date of this stela is relatively late, the central role of Taweret in the successful raising of children is still being stressed, showing the continuity of her character. She is also mentioned in Plutarch's notes on the central myth of Isis and Osiris. She joined the forces of order and helped Horus to defeat Set.[16]

In art edit

 
This faience vessel from the early Ptolemaic period (4th century BCE) is molded in the form of Taweret and was perhaps used to ritually cleanse liquid. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.
 
Limestone fragment of a stele depicting two people (right) worshipping Taweret, (19th-20th dynasty, New Kingdom).

Taweret bears physical aspects of both a fertility goddess and a fearsome protective deity. She takes the form of a female hippopotamus, a highly deadly creature. She is also often seen with features from other predatory creatures, most notably being the tail of a Nile crocodile and the paws of a lioness. These features directly parallel those of other ferocious protective ancient Egyptian deities, most notably the crocodile god Sobek and the lioness goddess Sekhmet. These violent theriomorphic deities take on some of the aspects of the animals that they represent – both to the benefit and detriment of humans. Taweret's predatory form allows her to ward away evil from the innocent. Likewise, Taweret's nurturing aspects are also reinforced in her iconography, as she frequently is shown with a bloated pregnant belly, and pendulous human breasts. These breasts are shared by the god of the Nile inundation, Hapi, and signify regenerative powers. Taweret's riverine form allows her to participate in that which annually revives the Nile Valley: the inundation personified by Hapi. It is partly due to her role in this event that may share this iconographic feature with Hapi. She frequently is seen holding the sa hieroglyphic sign (Gardiner V17), which literally means "protection".[17]

 
This apotropaic wand (c. 1880 to 1700 BCE) shows a procession of protective deities, including a hippopotamus goddess. Such a wand would have been used in rituals associated with birth and were perhaps used to draw a magical circle around the mother and child. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.
 
Faience Amulet of Taweret from the late period of Ancient Egypt. Egyptian Museum (Turin, Italy)

Taweret's image served a functional purpose on a variety of objects. The most notable of these objects are amulets, which protected mothers and children from harm. Such amulets, appearing before 3000 BCE, were popular for most of ancient Egyptian history. She also consistently appeared on household furniture throughout history, including chairs, stools, and headrests.[9] Apotropaic objects became popular in the Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE) and are thought to have been used in rituals related to pregnancy and birth. As is aforementioned, ivory wands and knives showing long processions of deities became widely used in this period. These objects have been shown on tomb paintings in the hands of nurses and wear patterns on the tips indicate that these nurses likely used them to draw protective patterns in the sand. Taweret is featured on almost all known wands, as her powers were invoked particularly to protect children and their mothers. The other deities are almost exclusively deities that accompany the mature sun god in his nightly journey through the dangerous Amduat (underworld). Taweret's inclusion among this company suggests a protective solar role. This is supported by later Ptolemaic (c. 332–30 BCE) conceptions of the goddess, which state that she reared – and in some traditions, birthed – the young sun god (cf. Metternich Stela).[18]

Ritual objects bearing Taweret's image were popular in Egyptian households for the remainder of Egyptian history. Vessels bearing Taweret's shape became popular in the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1069 BCE). These vessels presumably purified the liquid that was poured from it, as Taweret was considered to be "She of the Pure Water". Often these vessels had openings through the nipples, emphasizing Taweret's maternal aspects.[9]

In popular culture edit

A giant statue of Taweret appears in the science-fiction television series Lost and plays an important role in the backstory of the show's mysterious island.[19]

Antonia Salib portrays Taweret in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) television series Moon Knight (2022).[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Geraldine Pinch, Magic in Ancient Egypt (London: British Museum Press, 1994), 39.
  2. ^ Jennifer Houser-Wegner, "Taweret", in The Ancient Gods Speak: A Guide to Egyptian Religion, ed. Donald Redford (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), 351–352.
  3. ^ Miroslav Verner, "A Statue of Twert (Cairo Museum no. 39145) Dedicated by Pabesi and Several Remarks on the Role of the Hippopotamus Goddess". Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Alterumskunde 96 (1969): 53.
  4. ^ Philippe Germond and Jacques Livet, An Egyptian Bestiary (London: Thames and Hudson, 2001), 172.
  5. ^ Houser-Wegner, 351–352.
  6. ^ James Allen, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2005), 49.
  7. ^ Robert Ritner, "Household Religion in Ancient Egypt," Household and Family Religion in Antiquity, ed. John Bodel and Saul M. Olyan (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2008), 177–178.
  8. ^ a b c d Pinch, Mythology, 142.
  9. ^ a b c d e Houser-Wegner, 352.
  10. ^ For a comprehensive discussion of Taweret's acceptance into Minoan culture, see Judith Weingarten, The Transformation of Taweret into the Minoan Genius: A Study in Cultural Transmission in the Middle Bronze Age (Partille: P. Åströms, 1991).
  11. ^ Wengrow, David (2011). "Cognition, Materiality, and Monsters: the cultural transmission of counter-intuitive forms in Bronze Age societies". Journal of Material Culture 16:2 (2011), 137.
  12. ^ Culican, W (1969). "Dea Tyria Gravida". The Australian Journal of Biblical Archaeology. 1 (2): 35.
  13. ^ Pinch, Mythology, 131–132; 142.
  14. ^ Parker, R.A. (1974). "Ancient Egyptian Astronomy". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 276:1257 (1974), 61.
  15. ^ Horst Beinlich, Das Buch vom Fayum: zum religiösen Eigenverständnis einer ägyptischen Landschaft. (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1991), 99.
  16. ^ Pinch, Mythology, pp. 142–143.
  17. ^ Gardiner, Alan (1957). Egyptian Grammar: Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs. Griffith Institute, Oxford, 1957, p. 523.
  18. ^ For a full discussion of the deities on these wands, see Hartwig Atlenmüller, Die Apotopaia und Die Götter Mittelägyptens (Munich: Ludwig-Maximilians University, 1965).
  19. ^ "Lost's Foot Statue: What It Is & Where It Came From". Screen Rant. February 26, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022.
  20. ^ "Moon Knight Star Praises Freedom Marvel Gave Her as New Character Taweret". ComicBook.com. Retrieved April 14, 2022.

Sources edit

  • Allen, James. The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2005.
  • Altenmüller, Hartwig. Die Apotropaia und Die Götter Mittelägyptens. Munich: Ludwig-Maximilians University, 1965.
  • Beinlich, Horst. Das Buch vom Fayum : zum religiösen Eigenverständnis einer ägyptischen Landschaft. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1991.
  • Germond, Philippe and Jacques Livet. An Egyptian Bestiary. London: Thames and Hudson, 2001.
  • Houser-Wegner, Jennifer. "Taweret." In The Ancient Gods Speak : A Guide to Egyptian Religion. Edited by Donald Redford. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. 351–352.
  • Parker, R.A. "Ancient Egyptian Astronomy." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 276:1257 (1974), 51–65.
  • Pinch, Geraldine. Egyptian Mythology : A Guide to Gods, Goddesses, and Traditions of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.
  • Pinch, Geraldine. Magic in Ancient Egypt. London: British Museum Press, 1994.
  • Verner, Miroslav. "A Statue of Twert (Cairo Museum no. 39145) Dedicated by Pabesi and Several Remarks on the Role of the Hippopotamus Goddess. Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Alterumskunde 96 (1969): 52–63.
  • Weingarten, Judith. The Transformation of Taweret into the Minoan Genius: A Study in Cultural Transmission in the Middle Bronze Age. Partille: P. Åströms, 1991.
  • Wengrow, David. "Cognition, Materiality, and Monsters: the cultural transmission of counter-intuitive forms in Bronze Age societies." Journal of Material Culture. 16:2 (2011), 131–149.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Taweret at Wikimedia Commons

taweret, ancient, egyptian, religion, ancient, egyptian, tꜣ, also, spelled, taurt, tuat, tuart, weret, tawaret, twert, taueret, ancient, greek, Θουέρις, romanized, thouéris, thoeris, taouris, toeris, protective, ancient, egyptian, goddess, childbirth, fertilit. In Ancient Egyptian religion Taweret Ancient Egyptian tꜣ wrt also spelled Taurt Tuat Tuart Ta weret Tawaret Twert and Taueret and in Ancient Greek 8oyeris romanized Thoueris Thoeris Taouris and Toeris is the protective ancient Egyptian goddess of childbirth and fertility The name Taweret means she who is great or simply great one a common pacificatory address to dangerous deities 1 The deity is typically depicted as a bipedal female hippopotamus with feline attributes pendulous female human breasts the limbs and paws of a lion and the back and tail of a Nile crocodile She commonly bears the epithets Lady of Heaven Mistress of the Horizon She Who Removes Water Mistress of Pure Water and Lady of the Birth House 2 TaweretThe goddess Taweret portrayed as a bipedal hippopotamus with limbs like those of a feline Her hand rests on the sa sign 𓎃 a hieroglyph that means protection or lifesaver Name in hieroglyphsMajor cult centerNot applicable Taweret was a household deity worshipped throughout Egypt Symbolthe sa ivory dagger hippopotamus Images of protective deities like Taweret and Bes were placed on the outer walls of Ptolemaic temples in order to keep evil forces at bay Edfu Egypt Contents 1 History and development 1 1 Outside of Egypt 1 1 1 Ancient Crete 1 1 2 In Nubia 1 1 3 Phoenicia 2 In mythology 3 In art 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksHistory and development editArchaeological evidence demonstrates that hippopotamuses inhabited the Nile well before the dawn of Early Dynastic Period before 3000 BCE The violent and aggressive behavior of these creatures intrigued the people that inhabited the region leading the ancient Egyptians both to persecute and to venerate them From a very early age male hippopotamuses were thought to be manifestations of chaos consequently they were overcome in royal hunting campaigns intended to demonstrate the divine power of the king 3 However female hippopotamuses were revered as manifestations of apotropaic deities as they studiously protect their young from harm Protective amulets bearing the likenesses of female hippopotamuses have been found dating as far back as the Predynastic period c 3000 2686 BCE The tradition of making and wearing these amulets continued throughout the history of Egypt into the Ptolemaic Kingdom and the Roman period c 332 BCE 390 CE 4 nbsp Faience statuette of Taweret her hands resting on the sa From her ideological conception Taweret was closely grouped with and is often indistinguishable from several other protective hippopotamus goddesses Ipet Reret and Hedjet Some scholars even interpret these goddesses as aspects of the same deity considering their universally shared role as protective household goddesses The other hippopotamus goddesses have names that bear very specific meanings much like Taweret whose name is formed as a pacificatory address intended to calm the ferocity of the goddess Ipet s name the Nurse demonstrates her connection to birth child rearing and general caretaking and Reret s name the Sow is derived from the Egyptians classification of hippopotami as water pigs However the origin of Hedjet s name the White One is not as clear and could justly be debated 5 Evidence for the cult of hippopotamus goddesses exists from the time of the Old Kingdom c 2686 2181 BCE in the corpus of ancient Egyptian funerary texts entitled the Pyramid Texts Spell 269 in the Pyramid Texts mentions Ipet and succinctly demonstrates her nurturing role the spell announces that the deceased king will suck on the goddess s white dazzling sweet milk when he ascends to the heavens 6 As maternal deities these goddesses served to nurture and protect the Egyptian people both royal as seen in the Pyramid Texts and non royal nbsp Faience hippopotamus statuettes like this one were placed in tombs and temples to help the deceased be successfully reborn into the afterlife Brooklyn Brooklyn Museum It was not until the Middle Kingdom of Egypt c 2055 1650 BCE that Taweret became featured more prominently as a figure of religious devotion Her image adorns magical objects the most notable of which being a common type of wand or knife carved from hippopotamus ivory that was likely used in rituals associated with birth and the protection of infants Similar images appear also on children s feeding cups once again demonstrating Taweret s integral role as the patron goddess of child rearing 7 Quite contrarily she also took on the role of a funerary deity in this period evidenced by the commonplace practice of placing hippopotami decorated with marsh flora in tombs and temples Some scholars believe that this practice demonstrates that hippopotamus goddesses facilitated the process of rebirth after death just as they aided in earthly births These statues then assisted the deceased s passing into the afterlife 8 nbsp Faience amulet depicting Taweret Late Period c 600 400 BCE held in the Louvre Museum Paris With the rise of popular piety in the New Kingdom c 1550 1069 BCE household deities like Taweret gained even more importance Taweret s image has been found on an array of household objects demonstrating her central role in the home In fact such objects were even found at Amarna from the reign of Akhenaten c 1352 1336 BCE a pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty who reorganized ancient Egyptian religion into a monotheistic religion focused on the worship of the sun disc called the Aten The worship of many traditional gods was proscribed during this period so Taweret s survival in the artistic corpus found at the Aten s capital demonstrates her overwhelming significance in daily life 9 In this time period her role as a funerary deity was strengthened as her powers became considered not only life giving but regenerative as well Various myths demonstrate her role in facilitating the afterlives of the deceased as the nurturing and purifying Mistress of Pure Water 8 However Taweret and her fellow hippopotamus goddesses of fertility should not be confused with Ammit another composite hippopotamus goddess who gained prominence in the New Kingdom Ammit was responsible for devouring the unjust before passing into the afterlife Unlike Ammit the other hippopotamus goddesses were responsible for nourishment and aid not destruction In the Ptolemaic and Roman periods c 332 BCE 390 CE Taweret maintained a central role in daily Egyptian life In either the latter half of the Late Period c 664 332 BCE or the early Ptolemaic period a temple dedicated to Ipet was built at Karnak This enigmatic temple was thought to witness the daily birth of the sun god from the hippopotamus goddesses that dwelled there The sun god Amun Re was conceived of as having multiple divine mothers and by this later period in Egyptian history Taweret and the other hippopotamus goddesses were included in this body of solar mothers 8 Taweret s image also appeared on the outside of temples dedicated to other deities due to her apotropaic ability to ward off malevolent forces 9 Outside of temple settings the household cult of the goddesses remained strong and amulets bearing their likenesses peaked in popularity during these years Outside of Egypt edit Taweret developed a significant cult outside of Egypt as well In the Middle Kingdom c 2055 1650 BCE economic and minimal political contact with the Asiatic cultures of the Levant led to the exchange of ideologies Taweret was adopted into Levantine religions serving the same maternal role in these foreign pantheons Ancient Crete edit Due to communication between Levantine coastal towns and Mediterranean localities Taweret also became an integral part of Minoan religion in Crete where it is known as the Minoan Genius Like in Egypt her image was featured most prominently on protective amulets However this image was altered slightly from the Egyptian one as she was folded into the corpus of Minoan iconography in an artistic style that was congruent with other Minoan images From Crete this image spread to mainland Greece where the goddess was featured in palatine art in Mycenae 10 In Nubia edit nbsp This clay statuette of Taweret was found in a foundation deposit under the enclosure wall of the pyramid of the Nubian King Anlamani c 623 595 BCE Museum of Fine Arts Boston The goddess was also adopted by the Nubians the empire that lay directly south of Egypt in what is now Sudan Like her Minoan counterpart the Nubian Taweret became a part of the Nubian pantheon in the late Middle Kingdom of Egypt She was evidently featured in royal rituals at Kerma the capital of the empire 11 Phoenicia edit There is a connection to the Phoenician goddess of pregnancy Dea Gravida 12 In mythology editAlthough Ipet aka Apet or Aptet is mentioned in the Old Kingdom Pyramid Texts and Taweret is seen frequently on Middle Kingdom ritual objects hippopotamus goddesses did not gain a significant role in Egyptian mythology until the New Kingdom c 1550 1069 BCE Taweret is featured in some versions of a popular and widespread myth in which the Eye of Ra becomes angry with her father and retreats to Nubia in the form of a lioness Upon the Eye of Ra s eventual return to Egypt she assumes the form of a hippopotamus presumably Taweret and consequently brings the flooding of the Nile This myth demonstrates Taweret s primary function as a goddess of fertility and rejuvenation Some scholars feel that her role in the Nile inundation is one of the reasons she was given the epithet Mistress of Pure Water However her similar role in the rejuvenation of the dead also cannot be overlooked with regards to this epithet just as she provided life for the living through physical birth and the inundation she also cleansed and purified the dead so they could pass safely into the afterlife 13 nbsp Detail of the astronomical ceiling in the tomb of Seti I A celestial form of Taweret can be seen in the far right nbsp This image c 1463 BCE shows the astronomical ceiling of Senemut s tomb A celestial form of Taweret can be seen towards the bottom in the center In the New Kingdom Taweret s image was frequently used to represent a northern constellation in zodiacs This image is attested in several astronomical tomb paintings including the Theban tombs of Tharwas tomb 353 Hatshepsut s famed advisor Senenmut tomb 232 and the pharaoh Seti I KV17 in the Valley of the Kings 9 The image of this astral Taweret appears almost exclusively next to the Setian foreleg of a bull The latter image represents the Big Dipper and is associated with the Egyptian god of chaos Seth The relationship between the two images is discussed in the Book of Day and Night a cosmically focused mythological text from the Twentieth Dynasty c 1186 1069 BCE as follows As to this foreleg of Seth it is in the northern sky tied down to two mooring posts of flint by a chain of gold It is entrusted to Isis as a hippopotamus guarding it 14 Although the hippopotamus goddess is identified in this text as Isis not Taweret this phenomenon is not uncommon in later periods of Egyptian history When assuming a protective role powerful goddesses like Isis Hathor and Mut assumed the form of Taweret effectively becoming a manifestation of this goddess Likewise Taweret gradually absorbed qualities of these goddesses and is commonly seen wearing the Hathoric sun disc that is iconographically associated with both Hathor and Isis 8 This cosmic image continues to be seen in later periods although the tendency was to show such divine astral bodies more abstractly One example can be found in the late Ptolemaic or early Roman Book of the Faiyum a local monograph dedicated to the Faiyum and its patron gods namely Sobek Re Taweret is depicted in her standard form with a crocodile on her back and a small upright crocodile in her right hand She is shown in the section of the papyrus that is meant to depict the Faiyum s central Lake Moeris The papyrus depicts the solar journey of Re with Lake Moeris as the place into which the sun god descends for his nightly journey traditionally thought of as the underworldly realm of the Amduat Taweret appears here as a well known constellation to demonstrate the celestial and otherworldly properties of Lake Moeris She also serves as a fine protective divine mother to Sobek Re during his precarious journey In this respect she fulfills the role of Neith the primary divine mother of Sobek This Taweret figure is labeled as Neith the Great who protects her son demonstrating the malleability of the hippopotamus goddess form When in the role of a protective mother it is not uncommon that other goddesses would appear in the form of Taweret 15 Taweret was featured in other myths as well during these later periods In the famed Metternich Stela Isis tells Horus that he was reared by a sow and a dwarf almost certainly referring to Taweret and her fellow apotropaic demon god Bes respectively Although the date of this stela is relatively late the central role of Taweret in the successful raising of children is still being stressed showing the continuity of her character She is also mentioned in Plutarch s notes on the central myth of Isis and Osiris She joined the forces of order and helped Horus to defeat Set 16 In art edit nbsp This faience vessel from the early Ptolemaic period 4th century BCE is molded in the form of Taweret and was perhaps used to ritually cleanse liquid Walters Art Museum Baltimore nbsp Limestone fragment of a stele depicting two people right worshipping Taweret 19th 20th dynasty New Kingdom Taweret bears physical aspects of both a fertility goddess and a fearsome protective deity She takes the form of a female hippopotamus a highly deadly creature She is also often seen with features from other predatory creatures most notably being the tail of a Nile crocodile and the paws of a lioness These features directly parallel those of other ferocious protective ancient Egyptian deities most notably the crocodile god Sobek and the lioness goddess Sekhmet These violent theriomorphic deities take on some of the aspects of the animals that they represent both to the benefit and detriment of humans Taweret s predatory form allows her to ward away evil from the innocent Likewise Taweret s nurturing aspects are also reinforced in her iconography as she frequently is shown with a bloated pregnant belly and pendulous human breasts These breasts are shared by the god of the Nile inundation Hapi and signify regenerative powers Taweret s riverine form allows her to participate in that which annually revives the Nile Valley the inundation personified by Hapi It is partly due to her role in this event that may share this iconographic feature with Hapi She frequently is seen holding the sa hieroglyphic sign Gardiner V17 which literally means protection 17 nbsp This apotropaic wand c 1880 to 1700 BCE shows a procession of protective deities including a hippopotamus goddess Such a wand would have been used in rituals associated with birth and were perhaps used to draw a magical circle around the mother and child Walters Art Museum Baltimore nbsp Faience Amulet of Taweret from the late period of Ancient Egypt Egyptian Museum Turin Italy Taweret s image served a functional purpose on a variety of objects The most notable of these objects are amulets which protected mothers and children from harm Such amulets appearing before 3000 BCE were popular for most of ancient Egyptian history She also consistently appeared on household furniture throughout history including chairs stools and headrests 9 Apotropaic objects became popular in the Middle Kingdom c 2055 1650 BCE and are thought to have been used in rituals related to pregnancy and birth As is aforementioned ivory wands and knives showing long processions of deities became widely used in this period These objects have been shown on tomb paintings in the hands of nurses and wear patterns on the tips indicate that these nurses likely used them to draw protective patterns in the sand Taweret is featured on almost all known wands as her powers were invoked particularly to protect children and their mothers The other deities are almost exclusively deities that accompany the mature sun god in his nightly journey through the dangerous Amduat underworld Taweret s inclusion among this company suggests a protective solar role This is supported by later Ptolemaic c 332 30 BCE conceptions of the goddess which state that she reared and in some traditions birthed the young sun god cf Metternich Stela 18 Ritual objects bearing Taweret s image were popular in Egyptian households for the remainder of Egyptian history Vessels bearing Taweret s shape became popular in the New Kingdom c 1550 1069 BCE These vessels presumably purified the liquid that was poured from it as Taweret was considered to be She of the Pure Water Often these vessels had openings through the nipples emphasizing Taweret s maternal aspects 9 In popular culture editA giant statue of Taweret appears in the science fiction television series Lost and plays an important role in the backstory of the show s mysterious island 19 Antonia Salib portrays Taweret in the Marvel Cinematic Universe MCU television series Moon Knight 2022 20 See also editIpy goddess References edit Geraldine Pinch Magic in Ancient Egypt London British Museum Press 1994 39 Jennifer Houser Wegner Taweret in The Ancient Gods Speak A Guide to Egyptian Religion ed Donald Redford Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 351 352 Miroslav Verner A Statue of Twert Cairo Museum no 39145 Dedicated by Pabesi and Several Remarks on the Role of the Hippopotamus Goddess Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Alterumskunde 96 1969 53 Philippe Germond and Jacques Livet An Egyptian Bestiary London Thames and Hudson 2001 172 Houser Wegner 351 352 James Allen The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature 2005 49 Robert Ritner Household Religion in Ancient Egypt Household and Family Religion in Antiquity ed John Bodel and Saul M Olyan Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2008 177 178 a b c d Pinch Mythology 142 a b c d e Houser Wegner 352 For a comprehensive discussion of Taweret s acceptance into Minoan culture see Judith Weingarten The Transformation of Taweret into the Minoan Genius A Study in Cultural Transmission in the Middle Bronze Age Partille P Astroms 1991 Wengrow David 2011 Cognition Materiality and Monsters the cultural transmission of counter intuitive forms in Bronze Age societies Journal of Material Culture 16 2 2011 137 Culican W 1969 Dea Tyria Gravida The Australian Journal of Biblical Archaeology 1 2 35 Pinch Mythology 131 132 142 Parker R A 1974 Ancient Egyptian Astronomy Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A Mathematical and Physical Sciences 276 1257 1974 61 Horst Beinlich Das Buch vom Fayum zum religiosen Eigenverstandnis einer agyptischen Landschaft Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 1991 99 Pinch Mythology pp 142 143 Gardiner Alan 1957 Egyptian Grammar Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs Griffith Institute Oxford 1957 p 523 For a full discussion of the deities on these wands see Hartwig Atlenmuller Die Apotopaia und Die Gotter Mittelagyptens Munich Ludwig Maximilians University 1965 Lost s Foot Statue What It Is amp Where It Came From Screen Rant February 26 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Moon Knight Star Praises Freedom Marvel Gave Her as New Character Taweret ComicBook com Retrieved April 14 2022 Sources edit Allen James The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature 2005 Altenmuller Hartwig Die Apotropaia und Die Gotter Mittelagyptens Munich Ludwig Maximilians University 1965 Beinlich Horst Das Buch vom Fayum zum religiosen Eigenverstandnis einer agyptischen Landschaft Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 1991 Germond Philippe and Jacques Livet An Egyptian Bestiary London Thames and Hudson 2001 Houser Wegner Jennifer Taweret In The Ancient Gods Speak A Guide to Egyptian Religion Edited by Donald Redford Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 351 352 Parker R A Ancient Egyptian Astronomy Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A Mathematical and Physical Sciences 276 1257 1974 51 65 Pinch Geraldine Egyptian Mythology A Guide to Gods Goddesses and Traditions of Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 Pinch Geraldine Magic in Ancient Egypt London British Museum Press 1994 Verner Miroslav A Statue of Twert Cairo Museum no 39145 Dedicated by Pabesi and Several Remarks on the Role of the Hippopotamus Goddess Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Alterumskunde 96 1969 52 63 Weingarten Judith The Transformation of Taweret into the Minoan Genius A Study in Cultural Transmission in the Middle Bronze Age Partille P Astroms 1991 Wengrow David Cognition Materiality and Monsters the cultural transmission of counter intuitive forms in Bronze Age societies Journal of Material Culture 16 2 2011 131 149 External links edit nbsp Media related to Taweret at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taweret amp oldid 1215406721, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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