Nut The
goddess Nut was the daughter of Shu and Tefnut, and the
wife of Seb, the
Earth-god, and the mother of Osiris,
Isis, Set
and Nephthys, she was the
personifaction of the heavens and the sky, and of the
region wherein the clouds formed, and in fact of every
portion of the reign in which the sun rose, and travelled
from east to west. As a goddess of the late historical
period in Egypt Nut seems to have absorbed the attributes
of a number of goddesses who possessed attributes
somewhat simular to those of herself, and the identies of
several old nature goddesses were merged in her. In the
Pyramid Texts {e.g., Unas, line 452} Nut appears as the
regular female counterpart of Seb, who is described as
the "Bull of Nut" i.e., he was either the
father, or husband, or son, of the goddess ; her name is
sometimes written without, the determinative for sky,
e.g., in Pepi I, line 242, where it is said, "Nut
hath brought forth her daughter Venus," Properly
speaking, Nut, is the personifaction of the Fay-sky,
i.e., of the sky which rests upon the two mountains of
Bakhau and manu, that is, the Mountain of Sinset, but the
Pyramid Texts prove that the Night-sky, and it seems as
if this goddess and her male counterpart were entirely
different beings from Seb and Nut, and had different
names. In the text of Unas {line 557} we find mentioned
the two gods Nau and Naut, who are, however, regarded as
one god and there mentioned addressed accordingly. Thus
it is said, "thy cake is to "thee, Nau and
Naut, even as one who uniteth the gods and who
"maketh the gods to refresh themselves beneath their
shadow." In this passage {teta, line 218} we read of
the "star Nekhekh in the Night-sky " on the
other hand too much stress must not be laid upon the
derterminative, because in the word, which seems to mean
the "firmament strewn with the stars," the
determinative is that of the Day-sky.
At a very early period, however, the difference
between the Day-sky and the Night-sky was forgotten, at
least in speaking , and it is chiefly from good funeral
texts that we learn that a distinction between them was
made in writing. In the Papyrus of Ani are several
examples of the name Nut written, or, and the latter form
is several times found in the Papyrus of Nu, which dates
from the first half of the period of the XVIIIth Dynasty
; whenever one or other of these forms is found in good
papyri it is the Night-sky which is referred to in the
text. We have already seen in the paragraphs on the god
Nu that he had a female counterpart called Nut, who
represented the great watery abyss out of which all
things came, and who formed the celestial Nile whereon
the Sun sailed in his boats ; this watery path was
divided into two parts, that whereon the Sun sailed by
day, and that over which he passed during the night, The
goddess Nut, whom the texts describe as the wife of Seb,
is for all practical purpose the same being as Nut, the
wife of Nu ; this fact is proved by her titles, which
are, "Nut, the mighty one, the great lady, the
daughter of Ra" ; Nut the lady of the heaven the
mistress of earth gods" "nut, the great lady,
who gave birth "to the gods" ; "Nut, who
gave birth to the gods, the lady of "heaven, the
mistress of the Two Lands." The shrines of the
goddess were not very numerous, but there was a Per-Nut,
in Memphis, and a Het-Nut, in the Delta, and three
portions of the temple territory in Dendera were called
respectively Ant-en-Nut, Per-mest-en-Nut, and
Per-netch-Nut-ma-Shu, and. The goddess is usually
represented in the form of a women who bears upon her
hand a vase of water, which has the phonetic value Nu,
and which indicates both her name and her nature; she
sometimes wears on her head the horns and disk of the
goddess Hathor, and holds in her hands a papyrus sceptre
and the symbol of "life." She once appears in
the form of the amulet of the
buckle, from the top of which projects her head, and she
is provided with human arms, hands and feet ; sometimes
she appears in the form which is usually identified as
that of Hathor, that is a women standing in a sycamore
tree and pouring out water from a vase, for the souls of
the dead who come to her. The sycamore tree of Nut,"
is mentioned in Chapter lix. of the Book of the Dead, and the
vignette we see the goddess standing in it.
On a mummy-case at Turin the goddess appears in the
form of a woman standing on the emblem of gold. Above her
head is the solar disk with uraei, and she is accompanied
by the symbols of Ne-khebet, Uatghet, and Hathor as
goddess of the West ; by her feet stands two snake-headed
goddess of the sky, each of whom wears the feather on her
head. The goddess herself wears the vulture crown with
the uraei, and above are the uraei of the South and North
and the hawk of Horus wearing the white crown. Below her
is the sycamore tree, her emblem, and in it sits the
great cat of Ra who is cutting off the head of Apep, the
god of darkness and evil. In the form in which she
appears in this picture Nut has absorbed the attributes
of all the great mother of the gods and the world.
On coffins and in many papri we find her depicated in
the form of a woman whose body is bent round in such a
way as to form a semi-circle; in this attitude she
represents the sky or heaven, and her legs and arms
represent the four pillars on which the sky was supposed
to rest and mark the position of the cardinal points. She
is supposed to have lifted her up from the embrace of
Seb, and at last-named god is seen lying on the ground,
with one hand raised to heaven and the other touching the
earth. On each side of Shu is a hawk ; one represents the
rising and the other the setting sun. According to one
myth Nut gave birth to her son the Sun-god daily, and
passing over her body he arrived at her mouth, into which
he disappeared, and passing through her body he was
re-born, the following morning. Another myth declared
that the sun sailed up the legs and over the back of the
goddess in Atet, or Matet Boat until noon, when he
entered the Sket boat and continued his journey until
sunset. In accompanying picture we see Ra in his boat
with Shu and Tefnut {?} sailing up through the watery
abyss behind the legs of Nut, in the Atet Boat, and
sailing down the arms of the goddess in the Seket Boat
into the Tuat or Underworld ; the whole of the body and
limbs of the goddess are bespangled with stars. In
another remarkable picture we see a second body of a
woman, which is bent round in such a way to form a
semi-circle. Within that of Nut, and within this second
body of a man which is bent round in such a way as to
form an almost complete circle. Some explain this scene
by saying that the outer body of a woman is the heaven
over which Ra travels, and that the inner body is the
heaven over which the Moon makes her way at night, while
the male body within them is the almost circular valley
of the Tuat ; others, however, say that the two women are
merely personifications of the Day and nIght skies, and
the view is, no doubt, the correct one. The raising up of
Nut from the embrace of Seb represented the first act of
creation, and the great creative power which brought it
about having separated the earth from the waters which
were above it, and set the sun between the earth and the
sky, was now able to make the gods, and human beings,
animals etc. The Egyptians were very fond of
representations of this scene, and they had many variants
of it, as may be seen from the collection of
reproductions given by Lanzone. In some cases of those we
find Shu holding up the boat of Ra placed side by side on
her back, the god in one boat being Khepera, and the god
in the other being Osiris. Shu is sometimes accompanied
by Thoth, and sometimes by Khnemu ; in one instance Seb
has a serpant's head, and in another the goose, which is
his symbol, is seen standing near his feet with its beak
open in the act of cackling. The Egyptian artists were
not always consistent in some of their details of the
scene, for at one time the region wherein is the head of
Nut is described as the east, and at another to the west.
Finally, the goddess appears holding up in her hands a
tablet, on which stands a youthful figure who is probably
intended to represent Harpocrates, or one of the many
Horus gods ; in this example she is regarded as the
Sky-mother who has produced her son, the Sun-god.
According to another myth Nut was transformed into a huge
cow, the legs of which her body was supported by Shu, as
the body of Nut when in the form of a women was borne up
by this
god.
From a large number of passages found in this text of
all periods we learn, from first to last, Nut was always
regarded as a friend and protector of the dead, and the
deceased appealed to her for food, help, and protection
just as a son appeals to his mother. In the text of Teta
{line 175}, it is said to the deceased, "Nut hath
set thee as a god to Set in thy name of 'god,' and thy
"mother Nut hath spread herself out over thee in her
name of "Coverer of the sky," and in line 268
we have, "Nephthys hath united again for thee
"thy members in her name of Sesheta, the lady
"pf the buildings through which thou hast passed,
and thy mother "Nut in her Qersut, hath granted that
she "shall embrace thee in her name Qersu, and that
she "shall introduce thee in her name of
'Door.'" In the text of Pepi I. {line 256} it is
said, "Pepi hath come forth from Pe with "the
spirits of Pe, and he is arrayed in the apparel of Horus,
and "in the dress of Thoth, and Isis is before him
and Nephthys is "behind him ; Ap-uat hath opened
unto him a way, and Shu "lifteth him up, and the
souls of Annu make him ascend the steps and set him
before Nut who stretcheth out her hand to
"him." In the Book of
the Dead are several allusions to Nut and to the meat
and drink which provides for the deceased, and a chapter
{lix.} is found which was specially composed to enable
him to "snuff the air, and to have dominion over the
waters in the "Underworld." The texts reads
:------ "Hail, thou sycramore of the "goddess
Nut! Grant thou to me of the water and of the air
"which dwelleth in thee. I embrace the throne which
is in Unnu "{Hermipolis}, and I watch and guard the
egg of the Great "Cackler. It groweth, I grow it
liveth, I live ; it snuffeth the air, I snuff the
air." To make sure that the recital of these words
should have the proper result they were accompanied by a
vignette, in which the goddess is seen standing in a
tree, out of which she reaches to the deceased with one
hand a table covered with bread and other articles of
food ; with the other she sprinkles water upon him from a
libation vase as he kneels at the foot of a tree.
The sycamore of Nut is situated at Heliopolis, and is
often mentioned in mythological texts. According to the
Book of the Dead {cix.4} there were two
turquoise-coloured sycamores at Heliopolis, and the
Sun-god passed out between them each morning when he
began his journey across the sky, and "strode
forward "over the supports of Shu {i.e., the four
pillars, which bore "up the sky} towards the gate of
the East through which Ra "rose." The sycamore
of Nut was probably one of these, however, Apep, the
personifaction of darkness and evil, was slain at its
foot by the Great Cat Ra, and the branches of this tree
became a place of refuge for weary souls during the fiery
heats of summer noonday. Here they were refreshed with
food whereon the goddess herself lived, and here they
participated in the life of the divine beings who were
her offspring and associates. Since the mythological tree
of Nut stood at Heliopolis and was a sycamore tree under
which tradition asserts that Virgin Mary sat and rested
during her flight to Egypt, and there seems to be little
doubt that many of the details about her wanderings in
the Delta, which are recorded in the details about her
wanderings of a similar class, are borrowed from the old
mythology of Egypt. Associated with the sycamore of Nut
were the plants among which the Great Cackler Seb laid
the Egg of the Sun, and these may well be identified with
the famous balsan trees, from which was expressed the oil
which was so highly prized by the Christians of Egypt and
Abyssina, and which was used by them in their ceremony of
baptism ; these trees were always watered with water
drawn from the famous "Ain Shems {a name really
meaning the Eye of the Sun"}, i.e.,the well of water
which is fed by a spring in the immediate neighborhood,
and is commomly called the Fountain of the Sun." We
may note in passing another legend, which was popular
among the Copts, to effect that the Virgin Mary once hid
herself and her Son from the enemies in the trunk of the
sycamore at Heliopolis, and that is based upon an ancient
Egyptian myth recorded by Plutarch which declared that
Isis hid the body of Osiris in a tree trunk.
In the later times of Egyptian history the priests of
Dendera asserted that the home of Nut was in the city,
and in an inscription on their temple they recorded that
it was the birthplace of Isis, and that it contained the
birth-chamber, wherein Nut brought forth the goddess in
the form of a dark-skinned child, whom she called
"Khnemet-ankhet, the lady of love, on the fourth of
the five epagomenal days. When Nut saw her child, she
explained, "As {i.e., behold}, I have become thy
mother," and this was the orign of the name Ast, or
Isis. In Thebes Nut was identified with Isis, the
god-mother, the lady of Dendera, the dweller in Ant, the
goddess Nubt, who was born in Per-Nubt, and gave birth to
her brother Osiris in Thebes, and her son Horus {the
Elder} in Qesquest and to her sister Nephthys in
Het-Seshesh, and in the same city she was regarded as a
form of the goddess Apet, or Api, i.e., the hippopotamus
goddess Ta-urt, and also of the local city goddess Apet,
and also she also became a form of Hathor. The
identifaction of Nut with Api the hippopotamus goddess is
very ancient, for the text of Unas {line 487 ff.} we
read, "Come Shu, come Shu, come Shu, for"Unas
is born on the thighs of Isis, and he hath sunk down
"on the thighs of Nephthys, having been brought
fourth. O "Temu, thou father of Unas, grant that
Unas himself may be "set among the number of the
gods who are perfect, and "have understanding, and
are indestructible ; O Api, mother of Unas, give thou thy
breast to this Unas in order that he "may convey it
to his mouth, and that he may suck milk
there-"from." Another form of Nut was Heqet, a
goddess who was, strictly, the female counterpart of
Sebek-Ra of Kom Ombo.
As the children of Nut were not all brought forth in
one place so they were not all born on the same day ; her
five children, i.e., Osiris, Horus, Set, Isis, and
Nephthys, were born on the five epagomenal days of the
year, or as they are called in Egyptian, "the five
days of the year. On the first , the birth of Osiris, on
the second, was born Heru-ur, on the third was born Set,
on the fourth was born Isis, and on the fifth was born
Nephthys. The first, third, and fifth of the epagomenal
days were unlucky, the second is not described as either
lucky or unlucky, but the fourth is said to be a
"beautiful festival of heaven and earth," The
part which Nut played in the Egyptian Underworld was a
very prominent one, and from numerous passages in the
Book of the Dead we can see that without her favour life
would be imposible for those who have left the world, and
have begun their journey throughout the Tuat. The care
and protection which Nut exibited towards her son Osiris
caused her to be regarded as a tender and pitiful mother,
and every pious Egyptian prayed that she might do for him
even as she had done for Osiris, and hoped that through
her he might shine in heaven like the star Sept{Sothis}
when it shines in the sky just before sunrise.
The favor of Nut gave the deceased the power to rise
in a renewed body, even as Ra rose from the Egg which was
produced by Seb and Nut, and it enabled him to journey
with the sun-god each day from sunrise, and to pass
through the dreary habitations of the Tuat in safety. So
far back as the time of Men-kau-Ra {Mycerinus} the
Egyptians delighted to inscribe on the cover of the
coffins of their head a portion of the following extract
:------ Spreadeth herself thy mother Nut over thee in her
name of coverer of heaven, she maketh thee to be as a god
without thine enemy in thy name of god, she withdraweth
thee from thing every evil in her name of Defender from
every evil, great lady and from Ura whom she hath brought
forth;" and whenever it was possible they painted on
them figures of the goddess, who was represented with her
protecting wings stretched out over the deceased, and
with the emblems of celestial water and air in her hands.
They believed that the dead were safely under the
protection of the goddess when a picture of her was
painted on the cover of the coffin above them, and they
rarely forgot to suggest her presence in one form or the
other.
The following passages from the text of Pepi I. {line
100 ff.} illustrate other aspects of the goddess:----
"Hail, Nut, in whose "head appear the two eyes
{i.e., Sun and Moon}, thou hast taken possesion of Horus
and art his Urt-hekau {i.e., Sky of Heliopolis}, decree
thou that this Pepi shall live, and that he may not
perish. O Nut, who hast risen as a queen that thou mayest
take possession of the gods and their doubles, and their
flesh and their divine food, and of everything whatsoever
which they have, grant thou that he may be without
opposition, and that he may live, and let thy life, O
Nut, be the life of Pepi. Thy mother cometh to thee and
thou movest not. The Great Protectress cometh to thee and
thou movest not, but as soon as she bestowed her
protection upon thee thou dost move, for she hath given
thee thy head, she hath brought thee thy bones, she hath
collected thy flesh, she hath brought to thee thy bines,
she hath brought thee thy heart in thy body, thou livest
according to thy precepts, thou speakest to those who are
before thee, thou protectest thy children from grief,
thou purifiest thyself with the purifications of all
gods, and they come to thee with their doubles."
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