Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
I invented it myself, on the way from Seshat.
Seshat had had it already, and on the evidence of the radioactivity counters, not too long ago.
Seshat assisted the pharaoh in the "stretching the cord" ritual.
His feminine counterpart was a goddess named Seshat.
His feminine counterpart was Seshat, and his wife was Ma'at.
As the divine measurer and scribe, Seshat was believed to appear to assist the pharaoh in both of these practices.
His feminine counterparts were Ma'at and Seshat.
When Thoth became the god of wisdom, Seshat was seen as his daughter, or sometimes, as his wife.
Spell 10 of the Coffin Texts states "Seshat opens the door of heaven for you."
Ginny had already recast the play so that Seshat played Lear as an etsana, rather than Dejhuti playing him as the old king.
At first Diana only saw Owen, speaking quietly with Dejhuti and Seshat and Yomi.
It represents the goddess Seshat in later classical Ancient Egypt, as the goddess is identified with it, surmounted on her head.
The ancient Egyptian Seshat emblem hieroglyph is one of the oldest hieroglyphs from Ancient Egypt.
The workmen seem to have honoured Ptah and Reshep, the scribes Thoth and Seshat, as patron deities of their particular activity.
One famous example of the iconographic use of the Seshat's emblem is from Pharaoh, and Queen Hatshepsut's Red Chapel.
XI SESHAT, Obidicut, Lugaluru, Audhumla.
One prince of the fourth dynasty, Wep-em-nefret, is noted as the Overseer of the Royal Scribes, Priest of Seshat on a slab stela.
Of note: the word "sesheta" means, hidden things, mysteries, secrets, so the implication is that the Pharaoh is being given access to the power of those mysteries through Goddess Seshat.
Mistress of the House of Books is another title for Seshat, being the deity whose priests oversaw the library in which scrolls of the most important knowledge were assembled and spells were preserved.
The reliefs in his mortuary and valley temple depict a counting of foreigners by or in front of the goddess Seshat and the return of a fleet from Asia, perhaps Byblos.
Later, when the cult of the moon deity, Thoth, became prominent and he became identified as a god of wisdom, the role of Seshat changed in the Egyptian pantheon when counterparts were created for most older deities.
Thoth was inserted in many tales as the wise counsel and persuader, and his association with learning, and measurement, led him to be connected with Seshat, the earlier deification of wisdom, who was said to be his daughter, or variably his wife.
After the pairing with Thoth the emblem of Seshat was shown surmounted by a crescent moon, which, over time, degenerated into being shown as two horns arranged to form a crescent shape, but pointing downward (in an atypical fashion for Egyptian art).