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  2. Heqet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heqet

    Heqet (Egyptian ḥqt, also ḥqtyt "Heqtit"), sometimes spelled Heket, is an Egyptian goddess of fertility, identified with Hathor, represented in the form of a frog. [1] To the Egyptians, the frog was an ancient symbol of fertility, related to the annual flooding of the Nile.

  3. Frogs in culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frogs_in_culture

    Folklorist Andrew Lang listed myths about a frog or toad that swallows or blocks the flow of waters occurring in many world mythologies. [1]On the other hand, researcher Anna Engelking drew attention to the fact that studies on Indo-European mythology and its language see "a link between frogs and the underworld, and – by extension – sickness and death".

  4. Ogdoad (Egyptian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogdoad_(Egyptian)

    The names of Nu and Naunet are written with the determiners for sky and water, and it seems clear that they represent the primordial waters.. Ḥeḥ and Ḥeuḥet have no readily identifiable determiners; according to a suggestion due to Brugsch (1885), the names are associated with a term for an undefined or unlimited number, ḥeḥ, suggesting a concept similar to the Greek aion.

  5. Khnum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khnum

    Distinctively, The Morning Hymn to Khnum aligns him with the gods Amun and Shu, venerating him as the "Lord of life" and attributing him the ability to shape the bodies of humans. Another revered hymn, The Great Hymn to Khnum, celebrates him as the creator of all men, gods, and animals, as well as the provider of minerals and nurturer of plant ...

  6. Heh (god) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heh_(god)

    The mythology of the Ogdoad describes its eight members, Heh and Hauhet, Nu and Naunet, Amun and Amaunet, and Kuk and Kauket, coming together in the cataclysmic event that gives rise to the sun (and its deific personification, Atum). [6] Heh sometimes helps Shu, a god associated with air, in supporting the sky goddess Nut. [7]

  7. Leto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leto

    The myth of Leto transforming the mortals into frogs of the pond became very popular in post-antiquity art. This scene, usually called Latona and the Lycian Peasants or Latona and the Frogs , was popular in Northern Mannerist art, [ 133 ] allowing a combination of mythology with landscape painting and peasant scenes, thus combining history ...

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  9. Cultural depictions of amphibians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of...

    A plague of frogs is seen as a punishment in the Old Testament of the Bible. A frog being eaten by King Stork, by Milo Winter to illustrate a 1919 Aesop anthology. Two fables attributed to Aesop, The Frogs Who Desired a King and The Frog and the Ox feature frog characters. The Frogs is a comic play by Aristophanes.