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In Egyptian mythology,
Tawaret (also spelt Taurt, Taueret, Tuart, Ta-weret, Taweret,
and Taueret, and in Greek, Thoeris and Toeris) was originally
the demon-wife of Apep, the original
god of evil. Since Apep was viewed
as residing below the horizon, and only present at night,
evil during the day was envisaged as being a result of Tawaret's
malificence. As the counterpart of Apep,
who was always below the horizon, Tawaret was seen as being
the northern sky, the constellation roughly covering the area
of present-day Draco, which always lies above the horizon.
Thus Tawaret was known as mistress of the horizon, and was
depicted as such on the ceiling of the tomb of Seti I in the
Valley of the Kings.
In art, Tawaret was depicted as a composite of all the things
the egyptians feared, the major part of her being hippopotamus,
since this is what the constellation most resembled, with
the arms and legs of a lioness, and with the back of a crocodile.
On occasion, later, rather than having a crocodile back, she
was seen as having a separate crocodile resting on her back,
which was thus interpreted as Sobek, the crocodile-god, and
said to her consort.
Early during the Old Kingdom, the Egyptians came to see female
hippopotamuses as less agressive than the males, and began
to view their aggression as one of protecting their young,
particularly since it is the males that are territorially
agressive. Consequently, Tawaret became seen, very early in
egyptian history, as a deity of protection in pregnancy and
childbirth, and pregnant women wore amulets with her name
or likeness to protect their pregnancies. Her image could
also be found on knives made from hippopotamus ivory, which
would be used as wands in rituals to drive evil spirits away
from mothers and children.
In most subsequent depictions, Tawaret was depicted with
features of a pregnant woman, in a composite addition to the
animal-compound she was also seen as, which usually took the
form of pendulous breasts, pregnant stomach, and long straight
(human) hair (from her head). As a protector, she was often
shown with one arm resting on the sa symbol, which symbolized
protection, and on occasion carried an ankh, the symbol of
life, or a knife, which would be used to threaten evil spirits.
As such a protector, Tawaret was also given titles reflecting
a more positive nature, including Opet (also spelt Ipet, Apet,
and Ipy), meaning harem, and Reret (also spelt Rert, Reret,
Rerit, and Rertu), roughly meaning sow. Putting emphasis on
the more getting pregnant aspect of Tawaret's protection,
her cult centre at Thebes predominantly referred to her as
Opet, wheras her cult at Karnak preferred the more motherly
side, and so predominantly used the title Reret. Her cult
at Thebes identified her as a form of Nuit, the Ennead goddess
of the sky, since her constellation was always above the horizon,
indeed was at the highest point. Consequently, in her motherly
aspect, this lead to her, as Opet, being seen at Thebes as
the mother of Osiris, who was more generally seen as the son
of Nuit.
As the hippopotamus was associated with the Nile, these more
positive ideas of Tawaret allowed her to be seen as a goddess
of the annual flooding of the Nile, and the harvest that it
brought. Ultimately, although only a household deity, since
she was still considered the consort of Apep, Tawaret was
seen as one who protected against evil by restraining it,
and became known as (one) who is great, which is what Tawaret
means.
When Set fell from grace in the Egyptian
mindset, as a result of being favoured by the (xenophobically)
hated Hyksos rulers, and gradually took over the position
of Apep, as the god of evil, Tawaret
became seen as his concubine. She was seen as concubine rather
than wife, as Set was already married
to the extremely different Nephthys. It was said that Tawaret
had been originally an evil goddess, but changed her ways,
and held Set back on a chain. As the
goddess of motherhood, Tawaret was eventually assimilated
into the identity of Mut, the great-mother
goddess.
Gods and Goddesses
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