Feminine energy plays a vital role and balances the world with Softly in fierce energy. Each deity was responsible for a certain part of daily life of Egyptians. Let's know about them.Goddess power was really an example for fiery but nurture and Soft but can oppose. We can say !! Egyptian Goddesses are known Feminine energy can be both Petal princess and queen of death for the people.
Goddess of healing and magic - Isis
Isis is also called as Aset means “Queen of the Throne”. A very important figure in the ancient world, Isis was the wife of Osiris and mother of Horus. To the Egyptians she represented the ideal wife and mother; loving, devoted, and caring.
She was associated with funeral rites and said to have made the first mummy from the dismembered parts of Osiris. As the enchantress who resurrected Osiris and gave birth to Horus, she was also the giver of life, a healer and protector of kings.
Goddesses of war - Sekhmet
In her Sekhem untamable powers of destruction, war and pestilence, and her most famous epithet was “The One Before Whom Evil Trembles.” Yet she was also a great healer (sometimes in her calmer cat form Bastet) who could cure just about any known illness or disease.
Goddesses of domesticity, women's secrets, cats, fertility - Bastet
Bastet also known as Bast. Bastet is a woman with a cat’s head or we can say a cat. Originally an avenging lioness. She is the goddess of pleasure. Many cats lived at her temple and were mummified when they died. Some mythology says that she is goddess of the hunt who doesn't like men and prefers to use her skills and abilities to get what she needs.
Goddess of astronomy and the universe - Nut
Nut was the mother of Osiris, Isis, Seth, and Nephythys. Nut is usually shown in human form; her elongated body symbolizing the sky also depicted with stars covering her body, particularly her hands and feet Nut is capable of manipulating great quantities of energy and she can teleport across great distances and dimensions, granting superhuman powers to living beings or inanimate objects. She is often depicted on the ceilings of tombs, on the inside lid of coffins, and on the ceilings of temples.
Goddess of healing, darkness also death and decay - Nephthys
Nephthys is known as “Lady of the Mansion”. Nephthys is depicted as a woman with the hieroglyphs for a palace and basket on her head. She was Daughter of Geb and Nut, sister of Isis, wife of Seth and mother of Anubis. Isis and Nephthys was a protector of the dead, and they are often shown together on coffin cases with winged arms. Nephthys was disgusted by Seth’s murder of Osiris and helped her sister, Isis, against her husband, Seth.
Goddess of Sky and great divine mother : Mut
Mut was associated with nurturing, care, and loyalty also in her more aggressive aspect she is shown as a lion-headed goddess. Mut was the mother and protector of the king and the Egyptian kingship. Mut has the head of a vulture or a lioness with the royal scepter in her hand and the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt with long, brightly colored dress. She was one of the daughters of Ra, the wife of Amun, and mother of Khonsu.
Goddess of truth, justice, balance, and order - Ma’at
Ma’at was embodying the essential harmony of the universe. She was depicted as a seated woman wearing an ostrich feather. Ma’at regulated the seasons and the movement of the stars and the symbol of ancient Egyptian ethics. Ma’at was the ultimate judge in the afterlife.
Some stories of Ma’at say that Upon death, the heart was placed upon a scale. If it weighed less or the same as the feather of Maat, the person had led a virtuous life and could go on to the afterlife. If not, they’d be devoured by the demoness Ammit, who was part lion, hippo and crocodile.
Goddess of beauty (including cosmetics), sensuality, music, dancing, and maternity - Hathor
Hathor was one of the most popular and powerful goddesses. Hathor was the daughter of Ra. She is depicted in three forms; as a cow, as a woman with the ears of a cow, and as a woman wearing the headdress of a cow’s horns. Wearing cosmetics was seen as a form of worship to Hathor, and offerings of mirrors or cosmetic palettes to her were common. She was the consort of Horus, and her name actually means “House of Horus.”
Goddess of moisture,corrosive air and rain - Tefnut
Tefnut was the wife of Shu and mother of Nut and Geb. She and her husband were the first gods created by Atum. She was also depicted either as a lioness or as a woman with a lioness’s head. Tefnut is also responsible for the creation of life or humans.