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  2. Inventory Stela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inventory_Stela

    The Inventory Stela (also known as Stela of Khufu's Daughter) is an ancient Egyptian commemorative tablet dating to the 26th Dynasty (c. 670 BC). It was found in Giza during the 19th century. The stela presents a list of 22 divine statues owned by a Temple of Isis, and goes on to claim that the temple existed since before the time of Khufu (c ...

  3. Isetnofret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isetnofret

    Isetnofret (or Isis-nofret or Isitnofret) (Ancient Egyptian: "the beautiful Isis") was one of the Great Royal Wives of Pharaoh Ramesses II and was the mother of his successor, Merneptah. She was one of the most prominent of the royal wives, along with Nefertari , and was the chief queen after Nefertari's death (around the 24th year of the ...

  4. Westcar Papyrus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westcar_Papyrus

    [3] [4] [9] [11] [12] The fifth and last story tells about the heroine Rededjet (also often read as Ruddedet) and her difficult birth of three sons. The sun god Ra orders his companions Isis, Meskhenet, Hekhet, Nephthys, and Khnum to help Rededjet, to ensure the birth of the triplets and the beginning of a new dynasty.

  5. Behbeit El Hagar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behbeit_El_Hagar

    Behbeit El Hagar (Ancient Egyptian: Pr-ḥꜣbyt(.t), lit. 'house of festival hall', Coptic: ⲡⲁϩⲃⲉⲓⲑⲓⲟⲥ, Ancient Greek: Πααβηιθις [1]) is a village and an archaeological site in Lower Egypt that contains the remains of an ancient Egyptian temple to the goddess Isis, known as the Iseion.

  6. Isis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isis

    Other information comes from Plutarch (c. 46 –120 CE), whose book On Isis and Osiris interprets the Egyptian deities based on his Middle Platonist philosophy, [155] and from several works of Greek and Latin literature that refer to Isis's worship, especially a novel by Apuleius (c. 125 –180 CE) known as Metamorphoses or The Golden Ass ...

  7. Rededjet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rededjet

    Egyptologists now believe that the story of Rededjet is based on a conflation of two historical royal women named Khentkaus. The first one, Khentkaus I, lived during the Fourth Dynasty and may have given birth to two kings, while the second one, Khentkaus II, was the mother of two Fifth Dynasty kings, Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini. The supposition ...

  8. Djedkare Isesi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Djedkare_Isesi

    [note 17] [94] [95] This may be a result of the increased prominence of Osiris compared with the sun god Ra during the late Fifth Dynasty. [1] [96] [97] [98] The rise of Osiris corresponds to changes in the role of the king with respect to the wider Egyptian society. In particular, the king loses his role as the sole guarantor of the afterlife ...

  9. Osiris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osiris

    Typhon divided the body into twenty-six pieces, which he distributed amongst his fellow conspirators in order to implicate them in the murder. Isis and Hercules (Horus) avenged the death of Osiris and slew Typhon. Isis recovered all the parts of Osiris' body, except the phallus, and secretly buried them. She made replicas of them and ...