You’re pronouncing it wrong, translating an Egyptian Hieroglyphic name like [ *HORUS* ] to English change the pronunciation of the first letter from Arabic (حاء) to English/Latin (H). Why ? Because there’s no letter in English matches the original letter, the closest is H. Another Example is The Female Pharaoh [ *HATSHEPSUT* ] The first letter change in English because there is no specific letter for it in English like in Arabic ! That’s why if you practice Arabic (which currently the official Egyptian language) it gonna be easier to read & translate Egyptian Hieroglyphic scripts, you can’t fully comprehend an iconic civilization as long as you’re pronouncing it inaccurately !
That reconstruction sketch of the old temple is interesting... did more egyptian deities have similar temples around that time? It seems to actually have some similarity with the concept of the tabernacle, an enfenced courtyard with the holy set back inside that... it's no exact match, but it would hint to a whole culture of similar sanctuaries over the region... or could do that...
How do people tell apart Horus from a falcon-shaped Ra? When are they separate and when the same? Or in other related istances like eye of Ra and eye of Horus. Did one rose in mythological prominence before the other or were they hybridised together from separate Egyptian beliefs? This part of Egyptian mythology always confused me. Thank you for the hard work, always appreciate your videos.
The combination of both depth and breadth of topics you cover is astounding, especially for a freely available platform like UA-cam. Thanks for making these Andrew.
His work is entertaining, but far from scholarly. It amuses those who haven’t researched the subjects that he covers. However, some of his work is okay, but not great by a long stretch. This is no more than very opinionated viewpoints with some accuracies to time periods.
Yeah bro he does touch on everything which is great unlike these other two fools that have claims of him being incorrect, I have researched and although he does not go too deep into any religion he is always accurate ( pronunciation doesn’t matter in regards to dead languages since they are dead no one actually know today about pronunciation) and he’s videos are just outlines anything your love I’d say research yourself my friend these rabbit holes are awesome if you enjoy religion as a topic. Just remember the truth is hidden from everyone there is no one that actually has the truth
food fow thought: Thoth was associated with the ibis, Hermes was associated with Hawks, Athena was associated with Owls and Odin was associated with ravens. Birds seem to be linked to wisdom in many faiths
faiths from the fertile crescent & eastern mediterranean, and over time all of europe all had influence from their predecessors and one another, so maybe its partially the result of that?
@@petrruzicka9815 idk if they count as furries since they weren't humans. They were gods. And their images were most likely symbolic of their patronage, like Anubis whose head was a dog due to the association between dogs and the underworld
Love that you started with the Edfu temple. I've been there, and holy mother of God - that place is just INSANE. I'd go back to Egypt in a heartbeat, if I could. You don't see craftsmanship, with such precision, at those scales anywhere near your metropolitan areas. Egypt is a treasure trove. I still keep those small admittance cards I got when I visited the temples there, nearly 20 years ago. What a place.
This was most interesting! I’d love to see you take on Akhenaten and his attempt to convert Egypt to his monotheistic beliefs. I’ve always found that subject most interesting.
The boat parade strongly reminds me of the Greek Orthodox epitafios. Every Good Friday evening, your local church brings out an effigy of the body of Jesus, adorned with flowers, and the priests sing as it is being paraded around the neighbourhood, stopping now and again so the faithful can kiss and be blessed by the effigy.
It also resembles the shinto mikoshi that get carried around the neighborhood at shrine festivals. Clearly there is something universal about taking your god for a tour of the surroundings.
I remember that episode. That was my favorite Doctor who episode. Doctor who got sutekh the destroyer trapped in a time tunnel. I think sutekh lived for another 7,000 years. Died in The Time tunnel
I had a dream of Horus. He was a hologram, and there was a huge opening in the ground like a earthquake. Smoke and fire everywhere. He was walking back and forth thru the smoke coming out of the ground, screeching and raising his wings
Ancient Egypt is just the coolest ancient civilization of all times! Etruscans, Babylonians, Ancient Greeks and Ancient China are cool too, but Egypt is the definitive one for me.
I love how you approach your topics. One's religious preference need not be considered, it's all about the info without any seeming bias or persuasion on show from the presenter. It's well done without any flashy fluff padding. Huge fan here and I always recommend your videos when discussing religious subjects. Thanks!
I enjoyed your presentation I found it direct and informative. I’ve been to Egypt, and I’ve been inside the great pyramid of Khufu ;I’ve also stood atop Khsfre, that was in the late 50’s. Again an excellent presentation and I hope you do this with the other Egyptian gods.( Took lots of notes).
He was the Primarch of the XVIth legion known as the Luna Wolves - later Sons of Horus. He fell to chaos and became disillusioned with both the Imperium and the Emperor himself, leading him to start the eponymously named "Horus Heresy" in which 9 former loyalist legions including Horus' own betrayed the Emperor and attempted to wipe out all Loyalist Legions so they could Seize Terra, neé Earth. The Betrayal failed as soon as Horus was slain by the Emperor of Mankind himself in a duel, leading to the forced Exodus of the traitors to the Eye of Terror; a realm where the Warp and Real space intertwine.
“A Serpent Guard, a Horus Guard, and a Setesh Guard meet on a neutral planet. It is a tense moment! The Serpent Guard’s eyes glow. The Horus Guard’s beak glistens. The Setesh Guard’s nose drips.”
Was watching the pork taboo video, scrolling through the channel’s list. Saw this title. Wondered how far down the comments I would have to go for this. Not disappointed.
I've been into Egyptian mythology since elementary school, and I like to look at the centerpiece of its teachings as a precursor to the Christian trinity, centered around the gods Amun-Ra (the Creator), Thoth (the Preserver), and Osiris (the King of the Dead.) I'm also aware of the similar Hindu analogy (with Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva as their respective counterparts.) And there's also another trinity of Egyptian gods, symbolizing the in-between transitions among birth, life, and death: Horus (to give humans the breath of life), Seth (to grant humans the will to live and conquer in order to die), and Anubis (the one who leads humans into a new life after death.) Depending on the cult, I can see Amun-Ra being swapped out for Re-Horakhty, and Horus being swapped out for Ptah. There's still so much we don't know about ancient Egyptian religion, and it's fun to speculate on what could have been based off of what archeologists have already uncovered.
Have you ever read "Liber Al vel Legis" or "The Book of the Law" by Aleister Crowley. This little book written in 1904 brings Egyptian mythology into the Twentieth century... it may sing to your soul, as it has done to me and so many others. But a word of caution. It is written in the Book of Revelations that none shall ascend by way of the Book of the Beast, except the Beast himself and the one who shall follow him (his magickal son). This is the most important key to arriving at the angelic interpretation of this amazing book.
Egypt has been around for 5000 years that we know of and the narrative of ancient Egyptian historians suggests they’ve been around since before the flood. There’s a lot of contradictions in the theology from beginning to end.
@@seanfeeley6906 very true. Predynastic Egypt has had many customs and traditions that have evolved to become unrecognizable from - say - Ptolemaic Egypt, or even the Old Kingdom. One of the biggest misconceptions that people still have to this day is pointing out ancient Egypt as a monolith
@@seanfeeley6906 that's what makes speculating over these religious contradictions more fulfilling - the gods and goddesses didn't have just one "set" of things but multiple cults and multiple traditions that helped make up their gradually-changing images
I would love to see videos on ancient Sumerian religion and how it changed into Babylonian and Assyrian religions. Inanna in particular is interesting because she’s both an origin of Aphrodite and her Descent into the Underworld is in some ways an older version of Hades and Persephone myth
Nah, Persephone's story is much more in sharing with Ereshkigal. Both are queens of the underworld who were involuntarily brought there to be so, yet really took to it after the fact.
@@NevisYsbryd Exactly my point though. Inanna as a character is preserved in Aphrodite. But her story of Descent into the Underworld, which features Ereshkigal prominently, is an older version of Hades and Persephone. Inanna forcing Dumuzid to take her place in the underworld, and then all the crops dying because of it and the compromise of him only being there for half a year, was used to explain the seasons just like Persephone’s abduction was. It’s not a 1:1 comparison but an interesting mix of familiar elements
mmm while you are both right, it seems to me you just found a small piece of a much bigger puzzle. The "descent into the underworld" is an almost universal mytheme, with other major examples being the goddess Isis (another "Queen of the underworld") and goddesses Amaterasu and Izanami of Japanese lore. While the most common explanation of such similar but far away stories relies on cultural diffusion, a newer and much more interesting interpretation is that they originated independently by witnesses of the same celestial events. You won't find such interpretations in main mythological circles, but if you want to learn more about it I can't recommend enough authors such as David Talbott, Dwardu Cardona and Ev Cochrane. True pioneers of a different vision of what mythology actually is.
@@giacomostefanoni7634 Oh, if I was unclear on such, I am not refuting that it is a reoccurring mythological motif; I was specifically refuting Aphrodite (or Inanna/Ishtar/Astarte) as a cognate for Persephone (whose cognate is instead, I argue, Ereshkigal). Amaterasu would be a bit troublesome as a cognate going by the astronomical/astrological side of things, given that she is a Sun goddess to Inanna/Ishtar/Astarte/Aphrodite's Venus (and imo, Ereshkigal/Persephone's Mars), nor does she have any myths about descending to the underworld (the closest equivalent being her brief withdrawal to a cave, which was _not_ Yomi). Granted, the archetypal roles associated with each planet do sometimes vary cross-culturally, or even change over time (for another solar example, I think Apollo was originally a Martian god, rather than Solar). Isis... is a can of worms, given how many other goddesses' functions she eventually absorbed. She is anything _but_ a single, clean archetype.
and how much time between historical events. The temples of Edfu and Nekhar are 3000 years apart. Thats the span between today and the reign of King David.
@John Barber Ok, but when I try to put the timeframe into a scale my mind can comprehend I struggle. Like I finished school 15 years ago. This is ten of those (which I can kind of get a handle on), ten times and then all that twice. Just to get to the end of the New Kingdom/Bronze age collapse. and the whole of 'Egyptian history' going back from that point is nearly the same amount of time agan. I find the idea of fully internalising the scale of those time periods truely astounding.
This is so cool! I'd love to see more videos on ancient religions! The goddess Isis in particular seems really cool since she was so widely worshipped.
Great video! One thing I wondered though was is there any historical connection between the horus eye amulets worn by ancient egyptians for protection, and the nazar (or evil eye) amulets used throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East today? Might just be a coincidence of course, but the eyes I saw worn by Greek relatives growing up were the first thing I thought of when I saw the Horus amulets
Yes. All ancient cultures are mixtures of the same thing. All civilizations worship Baal, Ashteroth & Baal in their own region specific way. The only people who didn’t take on a worship of the same gods are the 12 tribes of Israel during the kingdom of David
@@ShadowD2C He is correct. Although Thoth was the initiated name of the Scribe Henok {Enoch}, the pyramids are the "Pillars of Enoch" & yes "Ba'al" has always been one of the most revered gods by non Judeo peoples. Read the Book of Enoch & the Emerald tablets. You will see..
Thanks. Learned a lot! As always. Another commenter suggested a video on the coptic church. Maybe in future a series on Christianity in Africa? Coptic, Orthodox Tewahedo, church in Congo etc. etc. Of interest also because of it's growth and significance.
Really really full explanation- loved this. But you forgot to mention that the nemes headdress worn by pharaohs are supposed to emulate Horus and his head of feathers.
Horus is the hero in us all...he conquers the chaos...he snatches life away from the hands of death...he is a golden bridge between the first time and this time
Excellent, how do you contact him, I suffer from spiritual attacks a lot, i am eating less little by little, i am abandoning sugar little by little I still have a long way to go, but wouldn't mind a little help, more awareness or a spiritual strength to fight my demons!
If you think about it, especially in the ancient, when the world wasn’t densely populated, the desire of any religion is the prosperity and multiplying the people. Homosexuals don’t reproduce, since homosexuals don’t reproduce their bloodline comes to an end and they slow down multiplying the number of your people. In the ancient world the focus was on more people and a richer people, they were being practical. We see in Bible, Torah be fruitful and multiply, other religions had similar views. In 2021, we now have 8 billion people on the planet. We can afford a population slow down.
it's complicated, as, at least in the Old Testament, we don't have any straightforward prohibition against homosexuality, it's a later interpretation of some passages (leviticus and Sodom and Gomorrah most famously) that has been put into question after a more scrupulous analysis in our day and age. I am no theologist, but the current line of thought is that many of what have been interpreted as bans of homosexuality are actually referring to either religious prostitution or sexual slavery, which are in my opinion way more worthy of God's attention.
@Mullerornis to expand on your observation, the Hebrews (or tgeir god) wanted their people to stand apart, separate and different from other peoples. Many other of God's commandments for the Hebrews do seem to say they can't do what was common in those days amongst other people's (rest on the seventh say, do not eat pork, no witchcraft, no tatoos). No homosexuality would also fall into that category of something common that other people did.
@@Sonjacrow that too but it was really due to and started off as distinguishing themselves from the other, and then it became a religious/spiritual corruption. And then it came to multiplying your seed and staying within the male and female sexual relationship dynamic
This is certainly an interesting topic, especially the relation between Horus and Seth. Recently I've learned with suprise from one of the videos by History with Cy (amazing channel about ancient history), that Pharaoh Peribsen of the 2nd dynasty identified himself with Seth, giving himself a Seth-related title instead of the traditional Horus name. His successor, Khasekhemwy, was apparently giving equal reverence to both gods.
"...wherein his uncle kills his father the king, forcing the son into action. This of course closely parallels that pillar of the Western literary canon... ...The Lion King." Like I can't tell if you're trolling me or not.
@@ReligionForBreakfast Think you ever do any more egyptian videos? Like maybe a video on Set? How he went from being the suns protector, to essentially being the secondary villian of Egyptian myth (Apep is the first).
He is trolling you. (-; The Lion King is the remake of a japanese anime series I've watched back in the 80ies called 'Janguru Taitei' or Kimba the White Lion in Germany.
The part about Horus taking incarnations of different Pharaohs reminded me of the Hindu god Vishnu a little! Vishnu is believed to come to the earth in his different avatars, some of his most popular avatars being the god Ram and some of my favorites! The god Krishna, Narasimh, and the sage/guru Parashuram
Vishnu is isn't his actual name He is vasu dev(dev means god) krishna(krishna in Greek means Cristos which became christ) So vasu and horu s It is same name So
Wow, the funerary inscriptions from ordinary, non-Royal Egyptians are just strikingly gorgeous. Maybe my favorite art I've seen from Ancient Egypt? Can't believe I haven't seen them before.
I understand but what about Horus the Elder? Am I misunderstanding or did you leave it out? Because most of what you talked about can be ascribed to Horus the Younger.
Yes Horus. The Archtraitor and Warmaster. In all honesty though, I feel that if this was ancient times and people believed it, I'd think that would make the Warhammer 40k universe a different religeon. I actually like that idea.
I would argue that the Wedjat is also meant to include a reference to Ra. The literal eye is usually always depicted as a singular disk, rather than including a separation between iris and pupil. This was meant to be interpreted as a typical sun disk, and used to reference the abstract power of Ra, or the Source. In this, I think it important to keep the distinction that Ra acted more as the preeminent framework for which "The Nine" were then able to act upon and within.
Please do a video on the god Amun. I would especially love to hear how he eventually became syncretized with Zeus and Ra, as well his fall from prominence and even demonization.
Excellent! 👍 Both of Horus’s eyeballs 👀 also refer to the sun ☀️& moon 🌝. Right eye is solar, left is lunar. At Edfu did you see the relief of Horus on the boat with the angry hippo underneath? It’s one of the events of Horus vs. Seth, where Seth challenges Horus to a boat race using stone boats. Horus cheats and Seth gets mad and turns into an angry hippo 🤣.
@@TransKidRevolution I am, actually lol. Literally an Egyptologist. Not really sure why asking my colleague if he saw a relief on the Edfu temple he visited makes me a "Karen", but enjoy being mad about it.
Great video. I have a little comment: Cleopatra lived closer to IPhones than the Pyramids of Giza. The Egyptian religion changed region to region and throw the timeline. Seth was a very popular god in Low Egypt (the north) while Horus was popular in High Egypt (the south). Most unifications if the Egyptian civilization started in the south so Horus defeated Seth on mythology. But Seth returned in the north several times in history (most of the attempts ended in humiliations on that God). I hope I am right and, once again, great video.
Good comment. Set wasn't considered an evil God by all Pharaohs. The Pharoahs named Seti and Ramseses(I-III) all took Set as their personal protective God. The Horus vs. Seth rivalry was all about bloodline feuds in a line of nomes(towns) connected by the Nile.
Oof, as someone who first mainly learned about Horus from a certain documentary years ago, it's nice to learn about him from an academic source that I trust, lol
You mean Zeitgeist? That movie was trash. As someone familiar with various mythologies, I immediately knew they were lying about most of their info. It's amazing how many people took that movie at face value with no further investigation.
@@franciscoscaramanga9396 Oh yes, totally. I remember being in my early 20s when I saw that and at first fell into a bit of a "better be safe and believe than be sorry" mindset, which is one of the ways cults can reel people in. I think what helped me out was realizing how emotionally manipulated I felt right afterwards, so I kept one foot in reality. Eventually, I rejected all the conspiracy BS when I had a few more life experiences on leadership activities (concluding that even larger systems would be way too difficult to maintain with routine meetings and amending trials when faced with Murphy's Law). Meanwhile, I realized how that documentary's claims about Horus and Jesus really omitted some crucial historical contexts like how Saturnalia coinciding with Christmas would fit in.
@@cuckoophendula8211 It's good you realized that. I used to believe in chemtrails until I realized that, in order for that to be true, everyone in the aero industry, including every private in the Airforce, would have to be in on it and actively lying about it. A useful dalliance with foolishness, because it made me make sure I can prove what I believe. The big thing for me with Zeitgeist was when they compared Dionysus with Jesus. The Horus bit I could've chalked up to error, and the Mithras part I wasn't familiar enough to discredit, but when they got to Dionysus I was like, "Wait... What?!" And that's when I knew the whole thing was a lie. I tried to tell the friend who recommended it to me about the problems with it, but people like that just believe what they want to believe.
Could be worse. I learned most of my Egyptian myth from the Kane chronciles. Accurate in some ways, but it’s YA book so Riordan had to change some details up a bit to get it suitable for the age.
Question for you, are you primarily a research professional or teacher/professor? Your ability to relay this much information so succinctly is astounding, so it feels like you’ve had classroom experience on the teaching side.
How much did the Egyptian pantheon influence the Greek one? I remember Thoth has similarities to Mercury, and the Egyptian pronounciation of Horus does sound a lot like Hera...
Seems like the Greeks and the Romans adopted/adapted parts of the Egyptian pantheon. There is a Temple of Isis in Pompeii. Serapis was a Greco-Egyptian god syncretized with Zeus and Osiris. Harpocrates too (as I mention in the vid).
I found something coincidental when reading Herodotus and compared it to the Jewish Book of Isaiah. Both mentioned fiery flying snakes, that must only exist in the Old World. Cultural myths bleeding into other cultures.
One Egyptian god who still reigns today is Ma'at, their goddess of justice, who was adopted into the Roman pantheon by Augustus as Justicia, and stands blindfolded holding a sword and scales over courthouses as Lady Justice.
Of course I know, Horus was the most favored son of the Emperor of Man, a brilliant tactician, unparalleled warrior and Charismatic leader, however he was corrupted by the power of the Chaos Gods and turned against his father the Emperor and in trying to overthrow him set the galaxy aflame
Hours had the ability to mimic a person and attain knowledge and wisdom from understanding. he instinctsually had the trait/quirk in his genetics and once he understood Thoth he became all of the above, the one who sees far. Mimir from Norse mythology had the same trait/quirk and Odin was jealous and envious and scared of that power so he killed him and left his head connected to the tree of life so the knowledge wasn't lost.
Just as I'm thinking "This is just like The Lion King!"... I'll be watching Baby Simba/Horus being lifted up by Rafiki on Pride Rock multiple times tonight!
You know, it's rather weird that 40k made their Horus associated with wolves given that the mythological Horus was associated with falcons Like if you're going to pick the name Horus why not go all the way with that Especially when they already had a wolf-themed Primarch
I guess there wasn't that much thought put into what was, at the time, ancient history for a tabletop war gaming system. As a fan of the Horus Heresy 30K Lore books, I think the stories would have been enhanced with Horus having a different animal icon as opposed to Russ. They use the Eye of Horus in the lore, but I don't think the writers knew enough about actual Egyptian mythology to incorporate Horus' Falcon concept. I don't think the original writers expected the Horus Heresy to become such a big story in and of itself. I think The Lunar Falcons would be cool!
Though, there already is a pretty Egyptian-themed Legion in the lore, that being the Thousand Sons, who went traitor and are sorta like mummy space marines in blue n gold :P
That's because W40k is based on the occult version of Horus Lucifer in Christian esotericism. He was the first to rebel against the Emperor, like Lucifer was the first to rebel against God.
7:30 ideal ruler of Egypt/Kemet was represented as union of Osiris and Horus, just like in the myth, Osiris was dismembered, but after help of Isis he regained his parts and finally his son's eyesight - union of tradition with the fresh vision of youth. Thats why pharaohs are incarnations of both of them. 14:56 is the perfect example, it is not Horus, it is Osiris-Horus, thats why he has green skin. Tell me if my interpretations are wrong.
That would probably involve the preservation of autocratic monarchies into the present day, given that so much of the rituals are linked to ritually consolidating royal power, which would likely imply poorer quality of life for everyone else (compared to modern democratic standards) :/
@@alvinlaiman9890 There are several ancient monarchies with ritual links to religion: those of Japan, Siam and the UK and (now disconnected from the land) the Dalai Lama and the Aga Khan. Also numerous African kings who were displaced by the colonialists.
@@faithlesshound5621 well yes, and all of those societies have had massive fundamental changes that limit the power and influence of the monarchy before improving societal quality of life
Sometimes he was called the Great Black One or Horus the Great. The place Nekhen, or Hierakonpolis, was associated with Horus. Horus of Nekhen. Was the Birdman movie a tribute to him?
Horus is the same as Marduk from Mesopotamian mythology, as Enki is also the same as Osiris in Egyptian mythology. Set, his uncle is Enlil. Ra, is the same as Anu.
Do someone knows why the hands are inverted? 7:41 for example. They have so much detail that it's clear they could have depicted them properly. At. 8:09 representing humans the hands are normal.
The inaccurately depicted hand is a transition or rotation reference that informs to the observer (that something) about the image involves a conceptual adjustment that the observer needs to recognize and consider. They knew how to draw but the error is extremely obvious. So, it is an intentional error to make the observer think and consider the image more carefully to find and understand a solution that resolves the apparent error. The solution could be within the image or purely conceptual as only related by an idea that the image involves.
Also Set represents change, the consious mind can defeat change by replicating itself through reproduction. That is the moral of the story. Hope this helps ✌
This is an easy one. Horus Lupercal is the first Primarch found by The Emperor of Mankind. He was the Primarch of the Luna Wolves Legion, later renamed The Sons of Horus. He was also later named Warmaster by the Emperor himself.
Go to nordvpn.com/rfb or use code rfb to get a 2-year plan plus 4 additional months with a huge discount.
Could you go on spotify
You’re pronouncing it wrong, translating an Egyptian Hieroglyphic name like [ *HORUS* ] to English change the pronunciation of the first letter from Arabic (حاء) to English/Latin (H). Why ? Because there’s no letter in English matches the original letter, the closest is H. Another Example is The Female Pharaoh [ *HATSHEPSUT* ] The first letter change in English because there is no specific letter for it in English like in Arabic ! That’s why if you practice Arabic (which currently the official Egyptian language) it gonna be easier to read & translate Egyptian Hieroglyphic scripts, you can’t fully comprehend an iconic civilization as long as you’re pronouncing it inaccurately !
주 예수 그리스도를 믿는 자마다 멸망치 않고 영생을 얻으리니 회개하라 하나님의 축복을
whoever believes in the Lord Jesus Christ shall not perish but have eternal life repent God bless
That reconstruction sketch of the old temple is interesting... did more egyptian deities have similar temples around that time?
It seems to actually have some similarity with the concept of the tabernacle, an enfenced courtyard with the holy set back inside that... it's no exact match, but it would hint to a whole culture of similar sanctuaries over the region... or could do that...
How do people tell apart Horus from a falcon-shaped Ra? When are they separate and when the same? Or in other related istances like eye of Ra and eye of Horus.
Did one rose in mythological prominence before the other or were they hybridised together from separate Egyptian beliefs?
This part of Egyptian mythology always confused me.
Thank you for the hard work, always appreciate your videos.
The combination of both depth and breadth of topics you cover is astounding, especially for a freely available platform like UA-cam. Thanks for making these Andrew.
Great comment. Now this makes me want to know more
@@rusty159753, he is mispronouncing almost all the names. Not only that, his explanations are wrong.
His work is entertaining, but far from scholarly. It amuses those who haven’t researched the subjects that he covers. However, some of his work is okay, but not great by a long stretch. This is no more than very opinionated viewpoints with some accuracies to time periods.
Yeah bro he does touch on everything which is great unlike these other two fools that have claims of him being incorrect, I have researched and although he does not go too deep into any religion he is always accurate ( pronunciation doesn’t matter in regards to dead languages since they are dead no one actually know today about pronunciation) and he’s videos are just outlines anything your love I’d say research yourself my friend these rabbit holes are awesome if you enjoy religion as a topic. Just remember the truth is hidden from everyone there is no one that actually has the truth
Economics 101: If you are not paying for a product you are the product
food fow thought: Thoth was associated with the ibis, Hermes was associated with Hawks, Athena was associated with Owls and Odin was associated with ravens. Birds seem to be linked to wisdom in many faiths
faiths from the fertile crescent & eastern mediterranean, and over time all of europe all had influence from their predecessors and one another, so maybe its partially the result of that?
Doves were linked to.peace
The gods of Egypt were the first Furry Anubis for example .
@@petrruzicka9815 idk if they count as furries since they weren't humans. They were gods. And their images were most likely symbolic of their patronage, like Anubis whose head was a dog due to the association between dogs and the underworld
But then you get the modern expression "birdbrain", it's quite funny.
Time zones has me getting religion for breakfast at midnight
Late afternoon for me here in Cairo
What about second supper ?
@@ReligionForBreakfast Wait, so who's getting it for breakfast?
Well, I got it before breakfast, sooo...
Religion For Midnight.
Or maybe Religion For Midnight Snack.
For something a little more risqué, Religion After Dark.
Or better yet: *how* is Horus? He doing ok?
Or even better: why is Horus?
; )
Thanks for asking @26CLT ❤️
Don't you mean who WAS Horus? Horus is dead. He died one day and never woke up the next. I think same happened to Osiris (except he died one night)..
@@StephensCrazyHour Jordan b Peterson is garbage.
Just want to appreciate how good that footage from Egypt is
Love that you started with the Edfu temple. I've been there, and holy mother of God - that place is just INSANE. I'd go back to Egypt in a heartbeat, if I could.
You don't see craftsmanship, with such precision, at those scales anywhere near your metropolitan areas. Egypt is a treasure trove. I still keep those small admittance cards I got when I visited the temples there, nearly 20 years ago. What a place.
Absolutely wasn't ready for the Lion King analogy. Even less so for the perfect mythology memeage. 10/10 well done.
This was most interesting! I’d love to see you take on Akhenaten and his attempt to convert Egypt to his monotheistic beliefs. I’ve always found that subject most interesting.
One of the worst interpretation of egyptology...
This gives so much context for the game Predynastic Egypt, which I love.
I came to the comments to look for a fellow fan.
The boat parade strongly reminds me of the Greek Orthodox epitafios. Every Good Friday evening, your local church brings out an effigy of the body of Jesus, adorned with flowers, and the priests sing as it is being paraded around the neighbourhood, stopping now and again so the faithful can kiss and be blessed by the effigy.
It also resembles the shinto mikoshi that get carried around the neighborhood at shrine festivals. Clearly there is something universal about taking your god for a tour of the surroundings.
yes like the godfather
@@BlastedRodent immediately what popped into my mind!👍
I've been spooked by Set ever since I saw him depicted, as Sutekh, in the Dr Who serial Pyramids Of Mars.
I remember that episode. That was my favorite Doctor who episode. Doctor who got sutekh the destroyer trapped in a time tunnel. I think sutekh lived for another 7,000 years. Died in The Time tunnel
Evil? Your evil is my good!
@@crispbacon113 which regeneration of the Doctor?
@@klarag7059 4
@@logansmith2703 ohhh. 🧣
I had a dream of Horus. He was a hologram, and there was a huge opening in the ground like a earthquake. Smoke and fire everywhere. He was walking back and forth thru the smoke coming out of the ground, screeching and raising his wings
i thougth of jesus
That is one of those dreams you will never forget awesome 👍🏽
No you didn't but nice try big guy🙄
This is why therapy helps. To end our world ending dreams of apocalyptic fervor 😅
Ancient Egypt is just the coolest ancient civilization of all times! Etruscans, Babylonians, Ancient Greeks and Ancient China are cool too, but Egypt is the definitive one for me.
Ancient Greeks ancient baby ancient Assyrian for me not sure what estrucian is
Any plans on doing Ancient Assyrian Gods?
Yes, please!
Good question!
@@boneyjensen uP
"He was the tenth member of The Group Of Nine."
This is the exact moment Egypt passed its prime.
The original "Itchy, Scratchy, and Poochie."
@@Ganondorfdude11 Horus was known for being proactive.
Do the Egyptians have a Shark god? Because they just jumped the shark with that one.
🤦🏻♂️
@@mattgerlach744 NOTE: Horus died on the way back to his home planet.
Was watching a bunch of Warhammer videos and got confused on why you started doing some too. Then I remembered Horus was also an Egyptian god...
Maybe the Egyptian also liked to play Warhammer 🤣
People call it the "Horus Heresy", but it's actually the "Horus Awakening"
@@TwistedAlphonso1 Heretic! *BLAM!*
@@TwistedAlphonso1 The Inquisitor wants to know your location.
The arch-Traitor Horus Lupercal...
I love how you approach your topics. One's religious preference need not be considered, it's all about the info without any seeming bias or persuasion on show from the presenter. It's well done without any flashy fluff padding. Huge fan here and I always recommend your videos when discussing religious subjects. Thanks!
I enjoyed your presentation I found it direct and informative. I’ve been to Egypt, and I’ve been inside the great pyramid of Khufu ;I’ve also stood atop Khsfre, that was in the late 50’s. Again an excellent presentation and I hope you do this with the other Egyptian gods.( Took lots of notes).
He was the Primarch of the XVIth legion known as the Luna Wolves - later Sons of Horus. He fell to chaos and became disillusioned with both the Imperium and the Emperor himself, leading him to start the eponymously named "Horus Heresy" in which 9 former loyalist legions including Horus' own betrayed the Emperor and attempted to wipe out all Loyalist Legions so they could Seize Terra, neé Earth. The Betrayal failed as soon as Horus was slain by the Emperor of Mankind himself in a duel, leading to the forced Exodus of the traitors to the Eye of Terror; a realm where the Warp and Real space intertwine.
Horus, protektor of the Pharao
This is the correct answer. Outside of you and 2-3 others all I see is heretics.
“A Serpent Guard, a Horus Guard, and a Setesh Guard meet on a neutral planet. It is a tense moment! The Serpent Guard’s eyes glow. The Horus Guard’s beak glistens. The Setesh Guard’s nose drips.”
Was watching the pork taboo video, scrolling through the channel’s list. Saw this title. Wondered how far down the comments I would have to go for this. Not disappointed.
*HORUS*
**angry vampire noises**
I've been into Egyptian mythology since elementary school, and I like to look at the centerpiece of its teachings as a precursor to the Christian trinity, centered around the gods Amun-Ra (the Creator), Thoth (the Preserver), and Osiris (the King of the Dead.) I'm also aware of the similar Hindu analogy (with Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva as their respective counterparts.)
And there's also another trinity of Egyptian gods, symbolizing the in-between transitions among birth, life, and death: Horus (to give humans the breath of life), Seth (to grant humans the will to live and conquer in order to die), and Anubis (the one who leads humans into a new life after death.)
Depending on the cult, I can see Amun-Ra being swapped out for Re-Horakhty, and Horus being swapped out for Ptah. There's still so much we don't know about ancient Egyptian religion, and it's fun to speculate on what could have been based off of what archeologists have already uncovered.
Get out of the christian cult an you’ll start to understand
Have you ever read "Liber Al vel Legis" or "The Book of the Law" by Aleister Crowley. This little book written in 1904 brings Egyptian mythology into the Twentieth century... it may sing to your soul, as it has done to me and so many others. But a word of caution. It is written in the Book of Revelations that none shall ascend by way of the Book of the Beast, except the Beast himself and the one who shall follow him (his magickal son). This is the most important key to arriving at the angelic interpretation of this amazing book.
Egypt has been around for 5000 years that we know of and the narrative of ancient Egyptian historians suggests they’ve been around since before the flood. There’s a lot of contradictions in the theology from beginning to end.
@@seanfeeley6906 very true. Predynastic Egypt has had many customs and traditions that have evolved to become unrecognizable from - say - Ptolemaic Egypt, or even the Old Kingdom.
One of the biggest misconceptions that people still have to this day is pointing out ancient Egypt as a monolith
@@seanfeeley6906 that's what makes speculating over these religious contradictions more fulfilling - the gods and goddesses didn't have just one "set" of things but multiple cults and multiple traditions that helped make up their gradually-changing images
I would love to see videos on ancient Sumerian religion and how it changed into Babylonian and Assyrian religions. Inanna in particular is interesting because she’s both an origin of Aphrodite and her Descent into the Underworld is in some ways an older version of Hades and Persephone myth
Nah, Persephone's story is much more in sharing with Ereshkigal. Both are queens of the underworld who were involuntarily brought there to be so, yet really took to it after the fact.
@@NevisYsbryd Exactly my point though. Inanna as a character is preserved in Aphrodite. But her story of Descent into the Underworld, which features Ereshkigal prominently, is an older version of Hades and Persephone. Inanna forcing Dumuzid to take her place in the underworld, and then all the crops dying because of it and the compromise of him only being there for half a year, was used to explain the seasons just like Persephone’s abduction was. It’s not a 1:1 comparison but an interesting mix of familiar elements
mmm while you are both right, it seems to me you just found a small piece of a much bigger puzzle. The "descent into the underworld" is an almost universal mytheme, with other major examples being the goddess Isis (another "Queen of the underworld") and goddesses Amaterasu and Izanami of Japanese lore. While the most common explanation of such similar but far away stories relies on cultural diffusion, a newer and much more interesting interpretation is that they originated independently by witnesses of the same celestial events. You won't find such interpretations in main mythological circles, but if you want to learn more about it I can't recommend enough authors such as David Talbott, Dwardu Cardona and Ev Cochrane. True pioneers of a different vision of what mythology actually is.
@@giacomostefanoni7634 Oh, if I was unclear on such, I am not refuting that it is a reoccurring mythological motif; I was specifically refuting Aphrodite (or Inanna/Ishtar/Astarte) as a cognate for Persephone (whose cognate is instead, I argue, Ereshkigal).
Amaterasu would be a bit troublesome as a cognate going by the astronomical/astrological side of things, given that she is a Sun goddess to Inanna/Ishtar/Astarte/Aphrodite's Venus (and imo, Ereshkigal/Persephone's Mars), nor does she have any myths about descending to the underworld (the closest equivalent being her brief withdrawal to a cave, which was _not_ Yomi). Granted, the archetypal roles associated with each planet do sometimes vary cross-culturally, or even change over time (for another solar example, I think Apollo was originally a Martian god, rather than Solar).
Isis... is a can of worms, given how many other goddesses' functions she eventually absorbed. She is anything _but_ a single, clean archetype.
The Bible tells about it all… they are real and coming back
Excellent video. I've been looking for a succinct and thorough explanation of Horus' attributes for years. Thanks!
It really does boggle the mind just how long ago all this was.
and how much time between historical events. The temples of Edfu and Nekhar are 3000 years apart. Thats the span between today and the reign of King David.
@John Barber Ok, but when I try to put the timeframe into a scale my mind can comprehend I struggle. Like I finished school 15 years ago. This is ten of those (which I can kind of get a handle on), ten times and then all that twice. Just to get to the end of the New Kingdom/Bronze age collapse. and the whole of 'Egyptian history' going back from that point is nearly the same amount of time agan. I find the idea of fully internalising the scale of those time periods truely astounding.
I think in epochs, barely a blink.
Great content. The usual concise summaries and easy to follow delivery. Thanks.
This is so cool! I'd love to see more videos on ancient religions! The goddess Isis in particular seems really cool since she was so widely worshipped.
Hagrid: "You're a falcon Harry!"
Your a Harry Falcon!
Great video! One thing I wondered though was is there any historical connection between the horus eye amulets worn by ancient egyptians for protection, and the nazar (or evil eye) amulets used throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East today? Might just be a coincidence of course, but the eyes I saw worn by Greek relatives growing up were the first thing I thought of when I saw the Horus amulets
Yes. All ancient cultures are mixtures of the same thing. All civilizations worship Baal, Ashteroth & Baal in their own region specific way. The only people who didn’t take on a worship of the same gods are the 12 tribes of Israel during the kingdom of David
@@nagameel7324 and you know that how ?
@@ShadowD2C the cultures & the practices were the same. They practiced everything that was banned in the Torah as veneration of their gods.
@@ShadowD2C He is correct. Although Thoth was the initiated name of the Scribe Henok {Enoch}, the pyramids are the "Pillars of Enoch" & yes "Ba'al" has always been one of the most revered gods by non Judeo peoples. Read the Book of Enoch & the Emerald tablets. You will see..
@@historysmysteriesunveiled8043 I want non jewish sources
*"Why is Horus?"*
- Drax, probably
More like, Brüno.
Spit Take!
Thanks. Learned a lot! As always. Another commenter suggested a video on the coptic church. Maybe in future a series on Christianity in Africa? Coptic, Orthodox Tewahedo, church in Congo etc. etc. Of interest also because of it's growth and significance.
I am studying Egyptian Mythology, and this would surely be helpful for me . Thanks RFB
Perfect timing!
@@ReligionForBreakfast yeah 🙃
You mean you studying African Mythology
@@pamelalupitasimelane1052 , Got proof?
@@senatorjosephmccarthy2720 yeah it’s African you dumb
Really really full explanation- loved this. But you forgot to mention that the nemes headdress worn by pharaohs are supposed to emulate Horus and his head of feathers.
Horus is the hero in us all...he conquers the chaos...he snatches life away from the hands of death...he is a golden bridge between the first time and this time
Best one I Hurd yet so far 😌❤️❤️❤️⚔️⚔️👁
Excellent, how do you contact him, I suffer from spiritual attacks a lot, i am eating less little by little, i am abandoning sugar little by little
I still have a long way to go, but wouldn't mind a little help, more awareness or a spiritual strength to fight my demons!
@@javierrodriguez2863 ASK THE MOST HIGH FOR STRENGTH JUST HAVE FULL FAITH I PROMISE YU FAMILY
@@javierrodriguez2863 Horace is in all of us. Just always know that you, he, and all of us are flying on a higher level.
*gets corrupted by chaos*
The Emperor's son who led a rebellion and alligned himself to the ruinious powers of Chao- oh, not that Horus
The archtraitor is the only horus I recognize
The Inquisition would like to know your location...
It is heresy to say that the vile Arch-Traitor Horus was a son of the God-Emperor
@@diegotapia2830 What did Little Horus Aximand ever do you to get so ignored?
@@lsamaknight "Being trash?"~Sigismund, proud ex-son of Rogal Dorn.
It's simple: he's the guy who betrayed the Emperor
GOD EMPEROR OF MANKIND
@@diegotapia2830 Beloved by all.
I was waiting for someone to make that joke
First thought that entered my head as well
The Arch-Traitor Warmaster Horus
A very interesting video on the eye, Horus, and other Egyptian history!
Love these videos and this channel!
He is the man who plunged the galaxy into a millenia of darkness, chaos, and heresy.
Everything began with the Razing of Monarchia.
Never rebuke a man who worships you.
A millenia, huh?
No thats apophis look it up
@@mk3489 I love your name
Id say ten millenia
Thank you very much for your latest! As always, fascinating, intelligent and informative.
Hey, Can you explain the history of why homosexuality is a taboo in many religions? Especially in the Abrahamic religions?
Didn't that start with Asceticism and body/soul dualism? Valuing only the bare minimum of physical needs to make room for the spiritual.
If you think about it, especially in the ancient, when the world wasn’t densely populated, the desire of any religion is the prosperity and multiplying the people.
Homosexuals don’t reproduce, since homosexuals don’t reproduce their bloodline comes to an end and they slow down multiplying the number of your people. In the ancient world the focus was on more people and a richer people, they were being practical.
We see in Bible, Torah be fruitful and multiply, other religions had similar views.
In 2021, we now have 8 billion people on the planet. We can afford a population slow down.
it's complicated, as, at least in the Old Testament, we don't have any straightforward prohibition against homosexuality, it's a later interpretation of some passages (leviticus and Sodom and Gomorrah most famously) that has been put into question after a more scrupulous analysis in our day and age. I am no theologist, but the current line of thought is that many of what have been interpreted as bans of homosexuality are actually referring to either religious prostitution or sexual slavery, which are in my opinion way more worthy of God's attention.
@Mullerornis to expand on your observation, the Hebrews (or tgeir god) wanted their people to stand apart, separate and different from other peoples. Many other of God's commandments for the Hebrews do seem to say they can't do what was common in those days amongst other people's (rest on the seventh say, do not eat pork, no witchcraft, no tatoos). No homosexuality would also fall into that category of something common that other people did.
@@Sonjacrow that too but it was really due to and started off as distinguishing themselves from the other, and then it became a religious/spiritual corruption. And then it came to multiplying your seed and staying within the male and female sexual relationship dynamic
Love this deep dive format 😀 great work.
This is certainly an interesting topic, especially the relation between Horus and Seth. Recently I've learned with suprise from one of the videos by History with Cy (amazing channel about ancient history), that Pharaoh Peribsen of the 2nd dynasty identified himself with Seth, giving himself a Seth-related title instead of the traditional Horus name. His successor, Khasekhemwy, was apparently giving equal reverence to both gods.
15:08 that animation is hilarious lol
i like how you try to cover so many ancient religions, it truly makes my breakfast great!~
"...wherein his uncle kills his father the king, forcing the son into action. This of course closely parallels that pillar of the Western literary canon...
...The Lion King."
Like I can't tell if you're trolling me or not.
Shakespeare wept.
@@ReligionForBreakfast The screams of a million high school English teachers crying "THROW US A FREAKING BONE"
@@ReligionForBreakfast Think you ever do any more egyptian videos? Like maybe a video on Set? How he went from being the suns protector, to essentially being the secondary villian of Egyptian myth (Apep is the first).
He is trolling you. (-;
The Lion King is the remake of a japanese anime series I've watched back in the 80ies called 'Janguru Taitei' or Kimba the White Lion in Germany.
@@ren_dhark there is nothing new under the aten
Thanks for your studies and the way you explain it all.
Andrew since you are currently in Egypt does that mean you might also do a video on the Coptic Orthodox Church?
one of the best content on the web thanks!! great fan from mexico
The part about Horus taking incarnations of different Pharaohs reminded me of the Hindu god Vishnu a little! Vishnu is believed to come to the earth in his different avatars, some of his most popular avatars being the god Ram and some of my favorites! The god Krishna, Narasimh, and the sage/guru Parashuram
Vishnu is isn't his actual name
He is vasu dev(dev means god) krishna(krishna in Greek means Cristos which became christ)
So vasu and horu s
It is same name
So
@Kareen Curry Yes he is JesusChrist and The Goddess Isis was Mary his mother.
Thank you for your historic report. Well done!
Wow, the funerary inscriptions from ordinary, non-Royal Egyptians are just strikingly gorgeous. Maybe my favorite art I've seen from Ancient Egypt? Can't believe I haven't seen them before.
They are very exquisite.
This is a very great video, explains everything simply but detailed.
The Lion King segment was astonishingly funny.
Thank you for this understanding of Horis 🐦☀️🐍
I understand but what about Horus the Elder? Am I misunderstanding or did you leave it out? Because most of what you talked about can be ascribed to Horus the Younger.
Yup, they were two different, if related, gods.
@@lh384 Hrous the elder tends to be the twin brother of Seth and is a child of Ra, While the Horus who fights Seth is the son of Isis and Osiris.
Yes Horus. The Archtraitor and Warmaster. In all honesty though, I feel that if this was ancient times and people believed it, I'd think that would make the Warhammer 40k universe a different religeon. I actually like that idea.
ur literally my fave channel, also ur inspiring me to major in theology ❤️❤️❤️
Thank you I appreciate what you've put down here I enjoy this class and God bless Horace Adam
I would argue that the Wedjat is also meant to include a reference to Ra. The literal eye is usually always depicted as a singular disk, rather than including a separation between iris and pupil. This was meant to be interpreted as a typical sun disk, and used to reference the abstract power of Ra, or the Source. In this, I think it important to keep the distinction that Ra acted more as the preeminent framework for which "The Nine" were then able to act upon and within.
A video on Set would be a nice compliment to this one. A categorically misundestood god, is he.
"Tenth member of a group of Nine"
*Thalmor Rage Noises*
This dude is right on point. I love this channel
Please do a video on the god Amun. I would especially love to hear how he eventually became syncretized with Zeus and Ra, as well his fall from prominence and even demonization.
After Alexander the Macedonian conquered Egypt he minted coins of himself with the ram horns & said he was the son of Amon-Zeus.
I learn more from a single one of your videos than I did in my entire time in college
Excellent! 👍 Both of Horus’s eyeballs 👀 also refer to the sun ☀️& moon 🌝. Right eye is solar, left is lunar. At Edfu did you see the relief of Horus on the boat with the angry hippo underneath? It’s one of the events of Horus vs. Seth, where Seth challenges Horus to a boat race using stone boats. Horus cheats and Seth gets mad and turns into an angry hippo 🤣.
I must have missed that! Maybe I filmed it by accident, but I'll need to go through my footage and see.
Angry Angry Hippos was a classic for ancient egyptian kids
@@Jeuro38 🤣🤣🤣
Ok karen🙄. Like your some kind of scholar in Egyptian art and archeology.
@@TransKidRevolution I am, actually lol. Literally an Egyptologist. Not really sure why asking my colleague if he saw a relief on the Edfu temple he visited makes me a "Karen", but enjoy being mad about it.
Religion For Breakfast is DOPE!👍Great channel. Awesome content. Thanks
a Person who lived a life and is now remembered as like the gods.
Great video. I have a little comment: Cleopatra lived closer to IPhones than the Pyramids of Giza. The Egyptian religion changed region to region and throw the timeline. Seth was a very popular god in Low Egypt (the north) while Horus was popular in High Egypt (the south). Most unifications if the Egyptian civilization started in the south so Horus defeated Seth on mythology. But Seth returned in the north several times in history (most of the attempts ended in humiliations on that God).
I hope I am right and, once again, great video.
Good comment. Set wasn't considered an evil God by all Pharaohs. The Pharoahs named Seti and Ramseses(I-III) all took Set as their personal protective God. The Horus vs. Seth rivalry was all about bloodline feuds in a line of nomes(towns) connected by the Nile.
It's interesting to me nobody uses the Egyptian names for their Gods when talking about them.
Horus the widow’s son, the God of Light, the God of the dawn, the light bringer and god of all initiations.
First time viewing the channel. Superbly put together nicely done
Horus is my favorite Egyptian diety, he's so cute!
Amazing. Thanks a lot from Egypt❤️
Oof, as someone who first mainly learned about Horus from a certain documentary years ago, it's nice to learn about him from an academic source that I trust, lol
You mean Zeitgeist?
That movie was trash. As someone familiar with various mythologies, I immediately knew they were lying about most of their info. It's amazing how many people took that movie at face value with no further investigation.
@@franciscoscaramanga9396 Oh yes, totally. I remember being in my early 20s when I saw that and at first fell into a bit of a "better be safe and believe than be sorry" mindset, which is one of the ways cults can reel people in. I think what helped me out was realizing how emotionally manipulated I felt right afterwards, so I kept one foot in reality. Eventually, I rejected all the conspiracy BS when I had a few more life experiences on leadership activities (concluding that even larger systems would be way too difficult to maintain with routine meetings and amending trials when faced with Murphy's Law). Meanwhile, I realized how that documentary's claims about Horus and Jesus really omitted some crucial historical contexts like how Saturnalia coinciding with Christmas would fit in.
@@cuckoophendula8211 It's good you realized that. I used to believe in chemtrails until I realized that, in order for that to be true, everyone in the aero industry, including every private in the Airforce, would have to be in on it and actively lying about it. A useful dalliance with foolishness, because it made me make sure I can prove what I believe.
The big thing for me with Zeitgeist was when they compared Dionysus with Jesus. The Horus bit I could've chalked up to error, and the Mithras part I wasn't familiar enough to discredit, but when they got to Dionysus I was like, "Wait... What?!" And that's when I knew the whole thing was a lie.
I tried to tell the friend who recommended it to me about the problems with it, but people like that just believe what they want to believe.
You mean Stargate... 🥴
Could be worse. I learned most of my Egyptian myth from the Kane chronciles. Accurate in some ways, but it’s YA book so Riordan had to change some details up a bit to get it suitable for the age.
Does this means we will see more videos about Egyptian Mythology? Hopefully there would be.
Yes! I have tons of footage from half a dozen other temples. Expect a video on Sobek soon.
@@ReligionForBreakfast Video request for Kemetic Revivalism please
@@ReligionForBreakfast Great!.
@@ReligionForBreakfast please more love for Set too 🧡
@@ReligionForBreakfast thank you so much
Question for you, are you primarily a research professional or teacher/professor? Your ability to relay this much information so succinctly is astounding, so it feels like you’ve had classroom experience on the teaching side.
How much did the Egyptian pantheon influence the Greek one? I remember Thoth has similarities to Mercury, and the Egyptian pronounciation of Horus does sound a lot like Hera...
Seems like the Greeks and the Romans adopted/adapted parts of the Egyptian pantheon. There is a Temple of Isis in Pompeii. Serapis was a Greco-Egyptian god syncretized with Zeus and Osiris. Harpocrates too (as I mention in the vid).
I found something coincidental when reading Herodotus and compared it to the Jewish Book of Isaiah. Both mentioned fiery flying snakes, that must only exist in the Old World. Cultural myths bleeding into other cultures.
One Egyptian god who still reigns today is Ma'at, their goddess of justice, who was adopted into the Roman pantheon by Augustus as Justicia, and stands blindfolded holding a sword and scales over courthouses as Lady Justice.
Of course I know, Horus was the most favored son of the Emperor of Man, a brilliant tactician, unparalleled warrior and Charismatic leader, however he was corrupted by the power of the Chaos Gods and turned against his father the Emperor and in trying to overthrow him set the galaxy aflame
That advertisement for NordVPN at the end was brilliant. Simple, memorable, relevant to the video. Nicely done.
Hours had the ability to mimic a person and attain knowledge and wisdom from understanding. he instinctsually had the trait/quirk in his genetics and once he understood Thoth he became all of the above, the one who sees far.
Mimir from Norse mythology had the same trait/quirk and Odin was jealous and envious and scared of that power so he killed him and left his head connected to the tree of life so the knowledge wasn't lost.
WOW. Impressive presentation and research. Thanks!!
Just as I'm thinking "This is just like The Lion King!"...
I'll be watching Baby Simba/Horus being lifted up by Rafiki on Pride Rock multiple times tonight!
Which came 1st? It's just like the writers behind The Lion King animation used multiple aspects of the Ancient KMT Spirituality and ran with it..
I’m picturing Thoth being Rafiki (he’s associated with baboon).
Fascinating, love ancient Egyptian mythology and religion, great video
He’s the prince that Dennis will never save from the clutches of King Dragon.
No, that's Horace. Horus is the dude whose Stand is Emperor.
I enjoyed this video very much.
Thank you,
Jeff
You know, it's rather weird that 40k made their Horus associated with wolves given that the mythological Horus was associated with falcons
Like if you're going to pick the name Horus why not go all the way with that
Especially when they already had a wolf-themed Primarch
I guess there wasn't that much thought put into what was, at the time, ancient history for a tabletop war gaming system. As a fan of the Horus Heresy 30K Lore books, I think the stories would have been enhanced with Horus having a different animal icon as opposed to Russ. They use the Eye of Horus in the lore, but I don't think the writers knew enough about actual Egyptian mythology to incorporate Horus' Falcon concept.
I don't think the original writers expected the Horus Heresy to become such a big story in and of itself.
I think The Lunar Falcons would be cool!
Because the Luna Wolves
Though, there already is a pretty Egyptian-themed Legion in the lore, that being the Thousand Sons, who went traitor and are sorta like mummy space marines in blue n gold :P
I like to think because the Horus stuff took place 30,000 years in the future that Horus’s connection to crows gradually fell off
That's because W40k is based on the occult version of Horus Lucifer in Christian esotericism. He was the first to rebel against the Emperor, like Lucifer was the first to rebel against God.
I’m finding statues of Horace and Phoenician /Egyptian style art here in North Carolina. Subscribed to your channel so I can learn more. Thanks!
Me before watching: "A video about the Warmaster. neat!"
Me after watching: "A Video about the origin of the Warmasters name. neat!
I’ve been watching your videos for years and I continue to appreciate them more and more 🙏
Remind me to never order a salad in Egypt
hi again
Set loves lettuce :P
I've been doing a lot research on Ancient Egypt feels like I have a connection with Egypt Great teaching
Can you do a video on King Dragon next? I love his fight scene against Prince Horus.
I love the myth about King Dragon where he sends his regards
7:30 ideal ruler of Egypt/Kemet was represented as union of Osiris and Horus, just like in the myth, Osiris was dismembered, but after help of Isis he regained his parts and finally his son's eyesight - union of tradition with the fresh vision of youth. Thats why pharaohs are incarnations of both of them. 14:56 is the perfect example, it is not Horus, it is Osiris-Horus, thats why he has green skin. Tell me if my interpretations are wrong.
Sometimes I wonder how different the World would be if we had some kind of Ancient Egyptian society still around.
They'd be like the China of Africa!
That would probably involve the preservation of autocratic monarchies into the present day, given that so much of the rituals are linked to ritually consolidating royal power, which would likely imply poorer quality of life for everyone else (compared to modern democratic standards) :/
@@alvinlaiman9890 There are several ancient monarchies with ritual links to religion: those of Japan, Siam and the UK and (now disconnected from the land) the Dalai Lama and the Aga Khan. Also numerous African kings who were displaced by the colonialists.
@@faithlesshound5621 well yes, and all of those societies have had massive fundamental changes that limit the power and influence of the monarchy before improving societal quality of life
See the movie stargate
Love this! Can we have more on the Egyptian gods/what is known about daily religion in ancient Egypt?
Sometimes he was called the Great Black One or Horus the Great. The place Nekhen, or Hierakonpolis, was associated with Horus. Horus of Nekhen. Was the Birdman movie a tribute to him?
Great video! Very informative! Thanks.
Horus is the same as Marduk from Mesopotamian mythology, as Enki is also the same as Osiris in Egyptian mythology. Set, his uncle is Enlil. Ra, is the same as Anu.
Do someone knows why the hands are inverted? 7:41 for example. They have so much detail that it's clear they could have depicted them properly. At. 8:09 representing humans the hands are normal.
The inaccurately depicted hand is a transition or rotation reference that informs to the observer (that something) about the image involves a conceptual adjustment that the observer needs to recognize and consider.
They knew how to draw but the error is extremely obvious. So, it is an intentional error to make the observer think and consider the image more carefully to find and understand a solution that resolves the apparent error.
The solution could be within the image or purely conceptual as only related by an idea that the image involves.
Also Set represents change, the consious mind can defeat change by replicating itself through reproduction.
That is the moral of the story.
Hope this helps ✌
Great video! Ancient Egypt is so fascinating. Will you be doing videos on other gods as well as other pantheons?
This is an easy one. Horus Lupercal is the first Primarch found by The Emperor of Mankind. He was the Primarch of the Luna Wolves Legion, later renamed The Sons of Horus. He was also later named Warmaster by the Emperor himself.
until he turned into a traitor heretic
Dont forget the arch-traitor to humanity
@@hpsauce1078 LET THE GALAXY BURN!
The archtraitor
What Warhammer 40k does to a mf