- In
Egyptian mythology,
Wepwawet (hieroglyphic wp-w3w.t; also
rendered Upuaut, Wep-wawet, Wepawet, Apuat, and Ophois) was
originally a
deity of funerary...
- that
nursed Romulus and
Remus Ōkami Okuri-inu Raijū Sköll Warg
Werewolf Wepwawet Wolf of Gubbio, a wolf
featured in a tale of
Francis of ****isi
Akela Big...
- is
taken from the name of an
Egyptian wolf god, one of
whose names was
Wepwawet or Sed. The less-formal
feast name, the
Feast of the Tail, is
derived from...
-
Procession of
Wepwawet: A mock
battle was
enacted during which the
enemies of
Osiris are defeated. A
procession was led by the god
Wepwawet ("opener of...
-
Thoth –
Tjenenyet – Tutu – Unut –
Wadjet – Wadj-wer –
Weneg –
Wepset –
Wepwawet –
Werethekau –
Wosret ****essors of Maat –
Cavern deities –
Ennead – Four...
- Hornung, The
Secret Lore of Egypt: Its
Impact on the West, 2001, p.6),
Wepwawet (cf. Egypt:
Temple of the
Whole World :
Studies in
Honour of Jan ****mann...
-
dynasty periods, she was
referred to as an "Opener of the Ways" (same as
Wepwawet),
which may have referred, not only to her
leadership in
hunting and war...
-
discoloration of the
corpse after embalming.
Anubis is ****ociated with
Wepwawet,
another Egyptian god portra**** with a dog's head or in
canine form, but...
-
Foremost of
Westerners [i.e., the Dead], the
Great God, Lord of Abydos; and
Wepwawet, Lord of the
Sacred Land [i.e., the Necropolis]." It can also be translated...
- The two most
prominent gods of
ancient Egyptian Asyut were
Anubis and
Wepwawet, both
funerary deities.
During the
First Intermediate Period, the rulers...