Entity Sources
Data license: MIT · Data source: jebboone/deitydb
- evidence_type
- {'description': 'e.g. Direct attestation, Secondary analysis, Epigraphic, Numismatic'}
- source_note
- {'description': 'Specific passage citations and notes on how this source attests the entity'}
54 rows where source_id = "SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS"
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Suggested facets: evidence_type
| Link | entity_id | source_id | evidence_type | source_note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENT_EGY_AKER,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Aker ENT_EGY_AKER | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 255 (§ 300): Aker the double-lion deity of the earth's horizons guards the passage of the sun and the dead king at the eastern and western horizons; a specifically Pyramid Text deity whose primary evidence is the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_ANHUR,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Anhur ENT_EGY_ANHUR | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Pyramid Texts (Utterances referencing Onuris/Anhur): attestation of the deity's role as sky-upholder and hunter in the Old Kingdom textual tradition. |
| ENT_EGY_ANUBIS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Anubis ENT_EGY_ANUBIS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Anubis (Inpw) is the embalmer and guide of the dead; "Anubis who is upon his mountain" is one of the most frequent epithets in the Pyramid Texts; Utterance 213 (§ 134): Anubis licks and assembles the king's limbs |
| ENT_EGY_ASH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,scholarly attestation | Ash ENT_EGY_ASH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | scholarly attestation | PT references to the Western Desert protective deity traditions include Ash; he guards the western lands that correspond to the underworld entrance in Old Kingdom cosmological geography |
| ENT_EGY_ATUM,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Atum ENT_EGY_ATUM | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 600 (§ 1652): "O Atum-Khoprer, you were on high on the primeval mound; you rose up as the benben stone in the Mansion of the Phoenix in On [Heliopolis]; you spat out Shu, you expectorated Tefnut" — the creation myth in its oldest textual form; Atum is the most frequent divine name in the Pyramid Texts |
| ENT_EGY_DEDWEN,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Dedwen ENT_EGY_DEDWEN | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Dedwen of Nubia, Pyramid Texts. |
| ENT_EGY_DUAMUTEF,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Duamutef ENT_EGY_DUAMUTEF | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 552: Duamutef (jackal-headed Son of Horus; "he who worships his mother") guards the stomach; protected by Neith; primary attestation in the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_DUAT,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Duat ENT_EGY_DUAT | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: the Duat (the underworld/afterlife realm) is the destination and landscape of most Pyramid Text utterances; its topography — the Field of Rushes (Sekhet-Aaru), Rosetau, the barque of Ra — is established here in its earliest surviving form; the Pyramid Texts are the primary ancient source for Duat geography |
| ENT_EGY_FOUR_SONS_OF_HORUS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Four Sons of Horus ENT_EGY_FOUR_SONS_OF_HORUS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 552 (§ 1360) names the Four Sons of Horus as divine guardians; the Pyramid Texts establish their collective function as protectors of the four viscera of the deceased king; their association with the four cardinal directions is also established in the PT |
| ENT_EGY_GEB,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Geb ENT_EGY_GEB | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Geb is the earth god, son of Shu and Tefnut; frequently invoked as a supporting deity in resurrection utterances; his title "heir of the gods" is established in the Pyramid Texts; Utterance 527 § 1248 |
| ENT_EGY_HAPY_NILE,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Hapy ENT_EGY_HAPY_NILE | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Hapy the Nile flood god is invoked as the source of abundance; the king's power is compared to Hapy's; Utterance 442 (§ 820): the king's natron and water are identified with the flood; foundational Pyramid Text attestation |
| ENT_EGY_HAPY_SON_OF_HORUS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Hapy Son of Horus ENT_EGY_HAPY_SON_OF_HORUS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 552: Hapy Son of Horus (baboon-headed; distinct from Hapy the Nile god) guards the lungs; protected by Nephthys; primary attestation in the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_HARAKHTY,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Harakhty ENT_EGY_HARAKHTY | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Ra-Harakhty (Horus of the horizon) is named in the Pyramid Texts; PT Utterance 266 and throughout: the solar falcon at the moment of rising and setting; the Old Kingdom solar theology of which Harakhty is the key figure is established in the PT |
| ENT_EGY_HAROERIS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Haroeris ENT_EGY_HAROERIS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Haroeris (Horus the Elder) is named in the Pyramid Texts as a sky-falcon deity; Old Kingdom theological tradition distinguishes him from the posthumous Horus son of Osiris; PT attestation places his cult among the oldest documented in the corpus |
| ENT_EGY_HARSIESE,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Harsiese ENT_EGY_HARSIESE | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Harsiese (Horus son of Isis) is attested in the Pyramid Texts as the divine form the deceased king assumes — the avenger of his father Osiris; PT utterances repeatedly invoke "Horus son of Isis" as the paradigm for royal resurrection and vengeance |
| ENT_EGY_HATHOR,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Hathor ENT_EGY_HATHOR | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 247 (§ 261) and throughout: Hathor receives the dead king with her embrace; she provides milk and nourishment; her role as "she who is in the horizon" connects her to the solar cycle; multiple utterances describe the king entering Hathor's arms |
| ENT_EGY_HEKA,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Heka ENT_EGY_HEKA | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Heka attested from the Coffin/Pyramid corpus. |
| ENT_EGY_HORUS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Horus ENT_EGY_HORUS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Horus is the avenger of Osiris and the living king; the Pyramid Texts establish the king as Horus while living and as Osiris after death; Utterances 219-222 (§§ 159-182) contain the earliest narrative of the Horus-Seth conflict; "Horus has seized Seth and set him under you" (§ 142) |
| ENT_EGY_HU,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Hu ENT_EGY_HU | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 251 (§ 273): Hu (the divine utterance, the authoritative word of the creator) is among the personified attributes of Ra's creative power; the Pyramid Texts are among the earliest texts attesting Hu as a distinct divine force |
| ENT_EGY_IAH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Iah ENT_EGY_IAH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Iah attested in the Pyramid Texts as the primary lunar deity of the Old Kingdom; the moon-name deity predating Khonsu's prominence |
| ENT_EGY_IHY,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Ihy ENT_EGY_IHY | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 334: "Ihy, son of Hathor, golden one" — Ihy is named in the Pyramid Texts as the divine child of Hathor who personifies the ecstatic joy of her music; his Old Kingdom attestation in the PT is his earliest surviving textual reference |
| ENT_EGY_IMSETY,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Imsety ENT_EGY_IMSETY | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 552: Imsety (the human-headed Son of Horus) is named among the four guardians; he guards the liver and is protected by Isis; primary attestation in the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_ISIS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Isis ENT_EGY_ISIS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Isis is the most active divine helper in the Pyramid Texts; she and Nephthys flank the coffin and call out to Osiris; her wings protect the dead; Utterance 366 (§ 627): "Isis comes to you... she suckles you with the milk of life and sustenance" |
| ENT_EGY_KHEPRI,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Khepri ENT_EGY_KHEPRI | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 600 and throughout: Khepri (the self-created; the scarab-beetle) is the morning form of the sun, the god of becoming and transformation; the rolling of the sun across the sky is modeled on the dung beetle rolling its ball; primary attestation in the Pyramid Texts |
| ENT_EGY_KHNUM,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Khnum ENT_EGY_KHNUM | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterances and the Memphite tradition: Khnum the ram-headed creator god is invoked as the craftsman who shapes on the potter's wheel; his Elephantine cult is attested from the Old Kingdom; the Pyramid Texts include his protective and creative functions |
| ENT_EGY_MAAT,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Maat ENT_EGY_MAAT | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Maat (cosmic order/truth) is a presupposition of the entire Pyramid Text theology; the king acts according to Maat, is given Maat as an offering, and ascends to maintain cosmic order; Utterance 219 (§ 166) and throughout; her feather is the measure of judgment |
| ENT_EGY_MIN,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Min ENT_EGY_MIN | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 461 (§ 872) and elsewhere: Min the ithyphallic fertility god is invoked in the Pyramid Texts as the divine procreative force; his Coptos colossi (among the oldest Egyptian art) predate the Pyramid Texts; his presence in the PTs confirms his Old Kingdom theological standing |
| ENT_EGY_MONTU,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Montu ENT_EGY_MONTU | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Montu the falcon-headed war deity of Armant (Hermonthis) is invoked in warrior contexts in the Pyramid Texts; his Old Kingdom period is his earliest significant attestation; the Pyramid Texts establish his role as a royal war deity before Amon superseded him |
| ENT_EGY_NEKHBET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Nekhbet ENT_EGY_NEKHBET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Nekhbet the vulture goddess of Upper Egypt is a protective deity invoked in the Pyramid Texts; she spreads her wings over the king; "your mother Nekhbet comes to you" (Utterance 508); among the oldest attested Egyptian deities |
| ENT_EGY_NEPHTHYS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Nephthys ENT_EGY_NEPHTHYS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Nephthys is Isis's inseparable companion in the Pyramid Texts; she mourns at the coffin head while Isis mourns at the feet; Utterance 366 (§ 628): "your sister Nephthys has come to you"; the two sisters as the protective pair flanking the dead is fully established in the Pyramid Texts |
| ENT_EGY_NUT,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Nut ENT_EGY_NUT | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Nut the sky goddess is one of the most invoked deities; the dead king is described as ascending to Nut and being received by her; "O Great One who became sky..." (Utterance 427 § 779); Nut swallows and re-births the sun each day |
| ENT_EGY_OGDOAD,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,scholarly attestation | Ogdoad ENT_EGY_OGDOAD | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | scholarly attestation | Individual Ogdoad members (especially Nun the primordial water and Amun the hidden one) appear in the Pyramid Texts; the full Ogdoad as an eight-fold collective is referenced; the Hermopolitan cosmogony is the background for the PT's primordial water theology |
| ENT_EGY_OSIRIS,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Osiris ENT_EGY_OSIRIS | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Osiris is the central deity of the resurrection theology that runs through the entire Pyramid Text corpus; the dead king is identified with Osiris; Utterance 219 (§ 170): the earliest written form of the Osiris resurrection myth; hundreds of utterances invoke Osiris |
| ENT_EGY_PTAH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Ptah ENT_EGY_PTAH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 570 (§ 1467): Ptah (Ta-Tenen) is invoked in the context of the earth-god theology; the Pyramid Texts include several utterances with Memphis theological language; Ptah's role as the craftsman-creator who spoke the world into being is the substratum of the texts |
| ENT_EGY_QEBEHSENUEF,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Qebehsenuef ENT_EGY_QEBEHSENUEF | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 552: Qebehsenuef (falcon-headed Son of Horus; "he who refreshes his brothers") guards the intestines; protected by Selket; primary attestation in the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_RA,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Ra ENT_EGY_RA | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Ra is the solar deity whose boat crosses the sky daily; the dead king joins Ra on his barque; Utterance 244 (§ 248); the transition from Osirian to solar theology is visible in the Pyramid Texts as a theological tension between the two dominant frameworks |
| ENT_EGY_SAH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Sah ENT_EGY_SAH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Sah/Orion in the Pyramid Texts. |
| ENT_EGY_SATET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Satet ENT_EGY_SATET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 508: Satis/Satet purifies the deceased king with water from Elephantine; her role as the guardian of the first Nile cataract who pours the purifying flood water is established in the Pyramid Texts; among the oldest attested state deities in the corpus |
| ENT_EGY_SEKER,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Seker ENT_EGY_SEKER | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Seker (Sokar) the falcon-headed funerary deity of the Memphis necropolis is a primary figure in the Pyramid Text underworld geography; he is lord of Rosetau (the entrance to the underworld); the Pyramid Texts are his earliest systematic attestation |
| ENT_EGY_SERQET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Serqet ENT_EGY_SERQET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Serqet (Selket) the scorpion goddess protects the dead king; she loosens the throat of the dead so they can breathe; "Serqet gives you breath" (Utterance 366 § 625); one of the four protective goddesses of the canopic jars |
| ENT_EGY_SESHAT,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Seshat ENT_EGY_SESHAT | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 616 (§ 1742): Seshat the goddess of writing and measurement stretches the cord for the king's mortuary temples; her role in measuring the king's reign and recording his deeds is established in the Pyramid Text corpus alongside other scribal theology |
| ENT_EGY_SETH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Seth ENT_EGY_SETH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Seth is named as the adversary who killed Osiris and opposes Horus; his power is apotropaically invoked in some utterances; the conflict between Horus and Seth is established in the Pyramid Texts as the primordial divine struggle; Utterance 219 and throughout |
| ENT_EGY_SHESMETET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Shesmetet ENT_EGY_SHESMETET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 317 and elsewhere: Shesmetet (the lioness goddess associated with the shesmet necklace) is invoked as a protective deity in the Pyramid Texts; her earliest textual attestation is in the Old Kingdom funerary corpus |
| ENT_EGY_SHU,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Shu ENT_EGY_SHU | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 600 § 1652: Shu created by Atum as the god of air and the space between earth and sky; PT throughout: Shu supports Nut the sky; his role as the first-created divine pair with Tefnut is established here |
| ENT_EGY_SIA,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Sia ENT_EGY_SIA | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 250 (§ 270): Sia (divine perception/intuition) personified alongside Hu; both travel with Ra in his solar barque; the Pyramid Texts are the primary ancient source for Sia as a named divine entity in Egyptian theology |
| ENT_EGY_SOBEK,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Sobek ENT_EGY_SOBEK | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 317 (§ 507): Sobek the crocodile god is invoked in the Pyramid Texts as a protective deity with connections to the primordial waters; his Fayum and Kom Ombo cults have Pyramid Text foundation |
| ENT_EGY_SOPDET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Sopdet ENT_EGY_SOPDET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Sopdet/Sirius in the Pyramid Texts. |
| ENT_EGY_TAYET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Tayet ENT_EGY_TAYET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Tayet the weaving goddess, Pyramid Texts. |
| ENT_EGY_TEFNUT,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Tefnut ENT_EGY_TEFNUT | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT Utterance 600 § 1652: Tefnut created alongside Shu by Atum; the moisture goddess; the primordial divine pair from whom Geb and Nut descend; established in the Pyramid Texts as the second rung of the Ennead |
| ENT_EGY_THOTH,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Thoth ENT_EGY_THOTH | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Thoth (Djehuty) is the divine scribe and messenger; he delivers words between Horus and Seth; he records the outcome of the divine tribunal; Utterance 359 (§ 594): "Thoth has judged between them" |
| ENT_EGY_WADJET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Wadjet ENT_EGY_WADJET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Wadjet the uraeus cobra of Lower Egypt is the eye of Re protecting the king; she spits fire at enemies; invoked alongside Nekhbet as the Two Ladies; among the oldest attested Egyptian deities (Narmer Palette context confirmed by Pyramid Texts) |
| ENT_EGY_WENEG,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Weneg ENT_EGY_WENEG | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Weneg the sky-supporter, Pyramid Texts. |
| ENT_EGY_WEPWAWET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Wepwawet ENT_EGY_WEPWAWET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | PT throughout: Wepwawet ("Opener of the Ways") is the jackal-headed deity who leads the dead king through the paths of the underworld and opens the roads to the sky; among the most frequently named deities in the Pyramid Texts; Utterance 468 (§ 905) |
| ENT_EGY_WOSRET,SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS,direct attestation | Wosret ENT_EGY_WOSRET | R. O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts (Oxford University Press, 1969; repr. Aris & Phillips, 1998) SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS | direct attestation | Wosret appears in the Pyramid Texts as a powerful protective female deity in the Theban tradition; Old Kingdom attestation |
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CREATE TABLE "entity_sources" (
[entity_id] TEXT REFERENCES [entities]([entity_id]),
[source_id] TEXT REFERENCES [sources]([source_id]),
[evidence_type] TEXT,
[source_note] TEXT,
PRIMARY KEY ([entity_id], [source_id], [evidence_type])
);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_sources_source_id]
ON [entity_sources] ([source_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_sources_entity_id]
ON [entity_sources] ([entity_id]);