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Hu – Personification of the authority of the spoken word [96] Iah – A Moon god [97] [19] [6] Igai – God of oases and Egypt's Western Desert [98] Ihy – A child deity born to Horus and Hathor, representing the music and joy produced by the sistrum [19] [99] Imhotep – Architect and Vizier to Djoser, eventually deified as a healer god [100]
Mars, god of war and agriculture, equivalent to Ares as far as being war gods; aside from this they have very little in common; Nerio, warrior goddess and personification of valor; Victoria, personification of victory, equivalent to the Greek goddess Nike; Virtus, god of bravery and military strength; Etruscan. Laran, god of war.
The total number of distinct Egyptian hieroglyphs increased over time from several hundred in the Middle Kingdom to several thousand during the Ptolemaic Kingdom.. In 1928/1929 Alan Gardiner published an overview of hieroglyphs, Gardiner's sign list, the basic modern standard.
In Greek mythology, Kratos, also known as Cratus or Cratos, [a] is the divine personification of strength. He is the son of Pallas and Styx.Kratos and his siblings Nike ('Victory'), Bia ('Force'), and Zelus ('Glory') are all the personification of a specific trait. [5]
The former genealogy was likely the result of confusion between Sud (Ninlil) and Sudag, a title of the sun god's wife. [160] He was a generally benevolent deity, who served as a night watchman and protector. [391] He may be the same god as the Sumerian Hendursaga, because the both of them are said to have been the husband of the goddess Ninmug ...
Heracles Apotropaios, god of strength and athletes; he was trained in medicine and called on to avert plagues. Hygieia, goddess of cleanliness and sanitation; Iaso, goddess of cures and remedies; Paean, physician of the gods, who was later syncretized with Apollo; Panacea, goddess of the cure by medicines and salves; Telesphorus, demi-god of ...
In Greek mythology, Bia (/ ˈ b aɪ ə /; Ancient Greek: Βία; "force, strength") is the personification of force. According to the preface to Fabulae by Gaius Julius Hyginus, Bia's Roman name was Vis. [citation needed] Vis is Latin for force, power, violence, or strength.
Strength will be right (dike) and reverence (aidos) will cease to be; and the wicked will hurt the worthy man, speaking false words against him, and will swear an oath upon them. Envy (zelos), foul-mouthed, delighting in evil, with scowling face, will go along with wretched men one and all.