Hathor (: Pyramid Texts

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Hathor (Ancient Egyptian: ḥwt-ḥr "House of Horus", Greek: Άθώρ Hathōr) was a

major goddess in ancient Egyptian religion who played a wide variety of roles. As a sky deity, she
was the mother or consort of the sky god Horus and the sun god Ra, both of whom were connected
with kingship, and thus she was the symbolic mother of their earthly representatives, the pharaohs.
She was one of several goddesses who acted as the Eye of Ra, Ra's feminine counterpart, and in
this form she had a vengeful aspect that protected him from his enemies. Her beneficent side
represented music, dance, joy, love, sexuality and maternal care, and she acted as the consort of
several male deities and the mother of their sons. These two aspects of the goddess exemplified
the Egyptian conception of femininity. Hathor crossed boundaries between worlds, helping
deceased souls in the transition to the afterlife.
Hathor was often depicted as a cow, symbolizing her maternal and celestial aspect, although her
most common form was a woman wearing a headdress of cow horns and a sun disk. She could also
be represented as a lioness, cobra, or sycamore tree.
Cattle goddesses similar to Hathor were portrayed in Egyptian art in the fourth millennium BC, but
she may not have appeared until the Old Kingdom (c. 2686–2181 BC). With the patronage of Old
Kingdom rulers she became one of Egypt's most important deities. More temples were dedicated to
her than to any other goddess; her most prominent temple was Dendera in Upper Egypt. She was
also worshipped in the temples of her male consorts. The Egyptians connected her with foreign
lands such as Nubia and Canaan and their valuable goods, such
as incense and semiprecious stones, and some of the peoples in those lands adopted her worship.
In Egypt, she was one of the deities commonly invoked in private prayers and votive offerings,
particularly by women desiring children.
During the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1070 BC), goddesses such as Mut and Isis encroached on
Hathor's position in royal ideology, but she remained one of the most widely worshipped deities.
After the end of the New Kingdom, Hathor was increasingly overshadowed by Isis, but she continued
to be venerated until the extinction of ancient Egyptian religion in the early centuries AD.
Images of cattle appear frequently in the artwork of Predynastic Egypt (before c. 3100 BC), as do
images of women with upraised, curved arms reminiscent of the shape of bovine horns. Both types
of imagery may represent goddesses connected with cattle.[2] Cows are venerated in many cultures,
including ancient Egypt, as symbols of motherhood and nourishment, because they care for their
calves and supply humans with milk. The Gerzeh Palette, a stone palette from the Naqada II period
of prehistory (c. 3500–3200 BC), shows the silhouette of a cow's head with inward-curving horns
surrounded by stars. The palette suggests that this cow was also linked with the sky, as were
several goddesses from later times who were represented in this form: Hathor, Mehet-Weret,
and Nut.[3]
Despite these early precedents, Hathor is not unambiguously mentioned or depicted until the Fourth
Dynasty (c. 2613–2494 BC) of the Old Kingdom,[4] although several artifacts that refer to her may
date to the Early Dynastic Period (c. 3100–2686 BC).[5] When Hathor does clearly appear, her horns
curve outward, rather than inward like those in Predynastic art. A bovine deity with inward-curving
horns appears on the Narmer Palette from near the start of Egyptian history, both atop the palette
and on the belt or apron of the king, Narmer. The Egyptologist Henry George Fischer suggested this
deity may be Bat, a goddess who was later depicted with a woman's face and inward-curling
antennae, seemingly reflecting the curve of the cow horns.[6] The Egyptologist Lana Troy, however,
identifies a passage in the Pyramid Texts from the late Old Kingdom that connects Hathor with the
"apron" of the king, reminiscent of the goddess on Narmer's garments, and suggests the goddess on
the Narmer Palette is Hathor rather than Bat.[4][7]
In the Fourth Dynasty, Hathor rose rapidly to prominence.[8] She supplanted an early crocodile god
who was worshipped at Dendera in Upper Egypt to become Dendera's patron deity, and she
increasingly absorbed the cult of Bat in the neighboring region of Hu, so that in the Middle
Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BC) the two deities fused into one.[9] The theology surrounding
the pharaoh in the Old Kingdom, unlike that of earlier times, focused heavily on the sun
god Ra as king of the gods and father and patron of the earthly king. Hathor ascended with Ra and
became his mythological wife, and thus divine mother of the pharaoh.

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