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These centre on representations of Nut, the sky goddess.
This child was the first human, strung between two worlds - born of a prince and a sky goddess.
In the beginning of the gods, he gambled time with the sky goddess Nut.
The Egyptian sky goddess was depicted as a cow.
Her mother was an unnamed sky goddess or, according to some myths, a mortal giant.
Nut was a sky goddess, seen as the mother of the stars and the sun where she gives birth to the sun everyday.
In Polynesian mythology, Ira is the sky goddess and mother of the stars.
Nut, being the sky goddess, plays the big role in the Book of Nut.
His mother is an unnamed sky goddess.
In Egyptian mythology, Nut was the sky goddess.
Nut, as well as being a sky goddess, is seen as bearing the gods, which suggests a kind of power over them.
Luonnotar is a sky goddess in the Finnish folk-epic Kalevala.
Above the figures is a depiction of Nuit, the sky goddess who stretches from horizon to horizon.
She was originally the goddess of the nighttime sky, but eventually became referred to as simply the sky goddess.
In Iroquois mythology, the sky goddess Atahensic died in childbirth.
His daughter, Nut, was the sky goddess whom he held over the Earth (Geb), separating the two.
Atahensic (also called Ataensic) is an Iroquois sky goddess that fell to the earth at the time of creation.
In one version of the Egyptian creation myth, the earth god Geb and the sky goddess Nut were twins.
Nut is an Egyptian sky goddess who leans over her husband/brother, Geb, the Earth God.
In Egyptian mythology, sky goddess Nut is sometimes called "Mother" because she bore stars and Sun god.
The context for this is the Egyptian belief that Ra (the sun god) was given birth to by Nut (the sky goddess).
The air god Shu separated the sky goddess Nut from the earth god, Geb.
Ra was sometimes said to enter the body of the sky goddess at sunset, impregnating her and setting the stage for his rebirth at sunrise.
Hahgwehdiyu and Hahgwehdaetgah - Sons of Iroquois sky goddess Atahensic.
When there was a main sky goddess, she often held the title of the "Queen of Heaven" or "Heavenly Mother".