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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!lhc!adm!smoke!matt
- From: matt@smoke.brl.mil (Matthew Rosenblatt)
- Newsgroups: sci.classics
- Subject: Re: Nut, Egyptian sky goddess
- Summary: Another source with an illustration of Nut.
- Keywords: The Mummy
- Message-ID: <19590@smoke.brl.mil>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 17:17:58 GMT
- References: <C1455x.LEs@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca> <1993Jan19.203232.13255@klaava.Helsinki.FI> <C14sC1.95y@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca>
- Organization: U.S. Army Ballistic Research Lab, APG MD.
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <C14sC1.95y@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca> msmorris@watsci.UWaterloo.ca (B
- Mike Morris) writes:
-
- >[Professor E. A. Wallis] Budge also gives a description of the
- >Egyptian heaven (page cii), where we find:
-
- > Nut, the sky goddess, was the wife of Seb, the earth
- > god, from whose embrace she was separated by Shu, the
- > god of the air; when this separation was effected, earth,
- > air, and sky came into being. Signor Lanzone (_Dizionario
- > di Mitologia Egizia_) has collected a number of illustrations
- > of this event from papyri and other documents, wherein we
- > have Seb lying on the ground, and Shu uplifting Nut with
- > his outstretched hands. The feet of the goddess rested on
- > the east, and her hands on the west; this is shown by the
- > scene wherein Shu is accompanied by two females who have
- > on their heads ``east'' and ``west'' respectively.
- . . .
- >And that's about all I have readily to hand on Nut. My memory has
- >it that there may be a Dover edition of a work by Budge on Egyptian
- >mythology that would probably tell you more, [Mike Morris]
-
- The illustration that Mr. Morris cites may also be found in Prof.
- Budge's book, _The Mummy_, reprinted by Causeway Books (95 Madison
- Avenue, New York, New York 10016, U.S.A.) in 1974. It is on page
- 292. Nut is wearing nothing but bracelets and anklets and possibly
- a headdress. The thumb and fingers of Seb's right hand are grasping
- one of Nut's nipples. The fingers of his left hand are touching
- her groin. Nut's torso is covered with stars.
-
- On the facing page, Nut is illustrated in a standing posture,
- which Prof. Budge describes:
-
- "Nut (hieroglyph omitted), the sky, the wife of Seb, and
- mother of Osiris, Isis, Set, Nephthys, Anubis, Shu, and Tefnut,
- was represented by a woman having a vase of water (hieroglyph
- omitted) on her head, and holding (ankh, hieroglyph omitted)
- in her right hand and (another hieroglyph omitted) in her left.
- She was painted on the outside of coffins, and was supposed
- to protect with her wings the deceased within."
-
-
- There are also paperback reprints of Prof. Budge's two-volume set,
- _Osiris_. Nut is mentioned a number of times in this set.
-
- -- Matt Rosenblatt
- (matt@amsaa.brl.mil)
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "This is the Scroll of Thoth,
- with which Isis raised Osiris
- from the dead."
- -- from the motion picture, "The Mummy"
-