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| | Ra
Father of the gods.

- Cult Center: Heliopolis and
throughout Egypt.
- Attributes: From very early
times Ra was a sun god. He took on many of the attributes and even the names
of other gods as Egyptian myths evolved. A good example of this is the god
Ra and Amun merging to become Amun-Ra or Ra and Horus combining to become
Ra-Harakhte. Since Ra was a god of great antiquity, there are far to many
stories connected with him to relate them all. I will relate some that I
find interesting, including the legend of Ra and Hathor.
. . . . .One
legend states that each day, Ra was born and began a journey across the sky.
Ra was believed to travel in the Manjet-boat. or the 'Barque of Millions of
Years'. He was joined on this daily journey by a crew of many gods . The
Manjet-boat would sail through the twelve provinces, representing the twelve
hours of daylight. At the end of each day Ra was thought to die and embarked
on his night voyage. For this journey he was called Auf, which means
'corpse'. Ra sailed in a boat called the Mesektet-boat or night-barque on
his journey through the twelve hours of darkness.
. . . . .It
was not always smooth sailing on these ships. During the day Ra had to defeat
his chief enemy, a serpent or snake named Apep. A great battle was faught
between Ra and Apep, and Ra was usually victorious, however on stormy days or
during an eclipse the Egyptians believed that Apep had been victorious and
swallowed the sun.
. . . . .Because
no wind blows in the Underworld, Auf (Ra) had to rely on various unfriendly
spirits and demons to help tow his barque along the river in the underworld.
Auf's main job in the Underworld was to bring light to the souls of the dead as
he passed through their realm. After his departure these souls fell back into a
lonely darkness. The Underworld of these early solar myths was a very different
place then the fields of peace that we find in the Osiris cults of the later
periods.
- Representation: He is often
pictured as a hawk or as a hawk headed man with a solar disk encircled by a
uraeus on his head. He is often pictured wearing the double crown of upper
and lower Egypt.
- Relations: Father of the
first divine couple, Shu and Tefnut. Grandfather of Geb and Nut, whose
children were Osiris and Isis, Seth and Nephthys.
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