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The chief deity in Egyptian
mythology, Ra, when considered as
a sun god, was thought to traverse the daily sky in a boat,
and cross the underworld at night in another, named Meseket.
As the mythology developed, so did the idea that Meseket was
controlled by a separate ferryman, who became known as Aken.
In their mythology, the underworld was composed of the general
area, named Duat, and a more pleasant
area to which the morally righteous were permitted, named
Aaru. At this point in history, Anubis
had become merely the god of embalming, and Osiris,
though lord of the whole underworld, dwelt specifically in
Aaru, and so Aken was identified as
the ruler of the area outside it, Duat
in general, on Osiris' behalf.
Due to the fact that the Egyptian word for part of the soul
Ba was also used as a word meaning ram, Aken was usually depicted
as being ram-headed. As both an underworld deity, and subservient
to Osiris, Aken became known as Cherti
(also spelt Kherty), meaning (one who is) subservient. The
main centre of his cult became Letopolis, and it is considered
a possibility that his cult caused the development of the
myth of the ferryman in other mediterranean mythologies, such
as that of Charon.
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