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  2. Horus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horus

    Horus may receive the fertile lands around the Nile, the core of Egyptian civilization, in which case Set takes the barren desert or the foreign lands that are associated with it; Horus may rule the earth while Set dwells in the sky; and each god may take one of the two traditional halves of the country, Upper and Lower Egypt, in which case ...

  3. Tjaru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tjaru

    Tjaru (Ancient Egyptian: ṯꜣrw) [3] was an ancient Egyptian fortress on the Way of Horus or Horus military road, the major road leading out of Egypt into Canaan.It was known in Greek as Selē (Ancient Greek: Σελη), in Latin as Sile or Sele, and in Coptic as Selē or Slē (Coptic: Ⲥⲉⲗⲏ or Ⲥⲗⲏ). [1]

  4. Category:Horus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Horus

    Articles relating to the god Horus, one of the most significant ancient Egyptian deities who served many functions, most notably as god of kingship and the sky. He was worshipped from at least the late prehistoric Egypt until the Ptolemaic Kingdom and Roman Egypt.

  5. Horus name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horus_name

    The Horus name is the oldest known and used crest of ancient Egyptian rulers. It belongs to the " great five names " of an Egyptian pharaoh . However, modern Egyptologists and linguists are starting to prefer the more neutral term: the " serekh name ".

  6. Heru-ra-ha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heru-ra-ha

    The passive aspect of Heru-ra-ha is Hoor-pa-kraat (Ancient Egyptian: ḥr-pꜣ-ẖrd, meaning "Horus the Child"; Egyptological pronunciation: Har-pa-khered), more commonly referred to by the Greek rendering Harpocrates; Horus, the son of Isis and Osiris, sometimes distinguished from their brother Horus the Elder, [13] who was the old patron deity of Upper Egypt.

  7. Iry-Hor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iry-Hor

    Iry-Hor's name is written with the Horus falcon hieroglyph (Gardiner sign G5) above a mouth hieroglyph (Gardiner D21).While the modern reading of the name is "Iry-Hor", Flinders Petrie, who discovered and excavated Iry-Hor's tomb at the end of the 19th century, read it "Ro", which was the usual reading of the mouth hieroglyph at the time.

  8. Ba (pharaoh) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ba_(Pharaoh)

    Ba, also known as Horus Ba, is the serekh-name of an early Egyptian or ancient Egyptian king who may have ruled at the end of the 1st Dynasty, the latter part of 2nd Dynasty or during the 3rd Dynasty. Neither the exact length of his reign nor his chronological position is known.

  9. Hedju Hor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedju_Hor

    Hedju Hor was a ruler in northern Egypt from the Predynastic Period. [2] [3] His true existence is unknown.The name Hedju Hor means 'the maces of Horus'. [4]It is thought that his reign began around 3250 BC, [citation needed] but almost nothing is known of his existence.