This absolutely nonsense.Sun cult came from NORTH where after harsh winter SUN is a life giving force that brings forth life compared Equatorial regions where WATER is life giving force and hence SERPENT cults developed in various polytheistic concepts. If you would go and enjoy and worship Sun in desert you can prove your concept of life source without water in Egypt.
In the beginning of the video when you were talking about the lack of light pollution, it occurred to me a full moon could make traveling by night possible and safer. The etymology of ‘to go back and forth’ could have a second meaning that Khonsu was a patron god of travelers as well.
@@OnliPhans_Kenobi the problem with Egyptology that it is so old fashioned and they don't allow new ideas in and they think that must be some form of constitution. in reality egyptian history is still not fully understood especially their view of death.
@@starcapture3040 Yes and no, I am currently a research fellow in Egyptology at one of the best universities and I only got the fellowship because of my new ideas. Many other Egyptologists are indeed old fashioned so you are indeed correct about that.
Stele of revealing......The stele was first displayed in the former Boulaq Museum with the interesting inventory number 666 .... Crowley wrote down his wifes "utterances" which became the "Book of the Law"
I like the backstory for Marvel's Konshu a lot more than the backstory for Thor, Odin, and gang. The Asgardians are aliens that inspired the Norse myths. Konshu is an alien that pretends to be the Egyptian Konsu. I think that better explains the differences between Konshu and Konsu
Konshu isn't and "alien" in Marvel comics, he's an actual deity, along with the Asgardians as well. Now in the MCU yeah it's kinda up for debate, but as for the comics they're actual conceptual beings.
@@8-bitOverlord No. When Knull came to Earth he even claimed that my daddy was a Elder God that came to Earth. Take that as you will... Khonshu’s will.
Khonshu in the comics is very much a good, from the overvoid actually. He’s as much a god as Anubis and Set, who he has had scuffles with through his avatars.
9:42 the story where Khonsu helps a pharaoh steal powers from gods reminded me of the story arc in the comics called "age of Khonshu" where Khonshu helps his champion (the titular moon knight) steal the powers of the Avengers and a bunch of other superheroes, I fell it's likely that the comic writers got the idea of the story arc from the myth
"Do you swear to protect the travelers of the night and bring my vengeance to those who would do them harm?" "yes" "Then rise. Rise again. AS MY FIST OF VENGEANCE! AS MY MOON KNIGHT."
khonsu is both, its the fallen Angel Adriel; has two personas, one heals (the biblical evil is aids, khonsu blood cured aids) his other persona is death, its the angel of death.
His depiction in Old Kingdom of Egypt especially in Cannibal Hymn is vastly different from that in New Kingdom depiction, he is depicted almost like a Cannibal who eats other god's hearts.(although he was a lesser prominent god and not known much about other than this ) ' Khonsu who lives on hearts '. But in New Kingdom of Egypt, he is the son of Amun and Mut -part of Theban or Creation triad along with them and associated with Moon and he's protector of night time travellers, healer and fertility.
If y'all haven't read any Moon Knight comics, literally PLEASE do yourself the service of reading Moon Knight vol8 from 2016-2017. Actual comic book masterpieces right there
Moon Knight's Khonshu is pretty much like Khonsu of Old Kingdom because at that time in Cannibal Hymn texts he is depicted as a bloodthirsty god and almost like a cannibal eats other god's hearts to gain power(but the comicbook counterpart is not a cannibal , he is more of a vengeful and bloodthirsty deity).
Ah, Lemire's run.. a true masterpiece, I'd Also like to add to your list 2014 moon knight run by Warren Ellise. Anoother Masterpiece that I wish all comics that came after followed.. (except for Lemire's, the 2016 is Incredible as is. No changes needed)
Fascinating to observe how the portfolios of various deities evolved over time. It reads like fan fiction, the story always changing as younger generations' headcanon supplants that of older generations.
@@revariox189 I mean, White American Evangelical Jesus is nothing at all like biblical Jesus. (I somehow doubt Yeshua would be into guns and Prosperity Gospel and the whole mega church phenomenon make zero sense whatsoever).
@@revariox189 I mean, he went from being El, the babylonian God. To Elohim, to Yahweh. He went from being one God among many, to the most powerful among Gods, to the only God. He went from being the God of War to being the God of love. He went to being one person, to being a trinity. He went from being very quick to anger and very vindictive to being very forgiving. And before anyone says, he was always both or the current image of God is what he always was... read the bible. There is never mention of many of these things, until the New Testament. For example, the Holy trinity, it is until the Gospels where the holy spirit is for the very fist time mentioned. There is also no mention of Jesus or God having a son, until the Gospels. God is also the God of War, and is constantly referred to that way, and he is asked Israel plenty of times to go to war, unprovoked. But suddenly Jesus, is all against war and violence, he talks about love and forgiveness... So in the end, Christianity is not that different.
I didn't even knew that Khonshu was based on a real deity from Egypthian religion. Because in the few comics I saw him, Khonshu was represented as a faceless white Pharaon (sort of an Nyarlathotep with the colors inverted) and because Marvel went back and forth between Khonshu being a real entity and just an allucination caused by Marc Spector's mental illness, I just assumed he was invented by the comicbook writers. Is fascinating to know thar Khonsu is real (also, for some reason the god's name is apparently spelled "Jonsu" in Spanish)
Maybe he's just a figment of your imagination? Ooooooooooohhhhhhhohhhhhhohhh 👻 (Seriously though, I was in the same boat. I thought he was fiction for the longest time)
Spanish “Jonsu” is actually closer to the Ancient Egyptian pronunciation-the sound would’ve been similar to Spanish J, rather than English K, which is represented as just “k” in transliteration
The connection of the moon to healing reminds me of the medieval belief that bleeding a patient should be considered according to the phases of the moon, for just as the moon controlled the flood of tides, it also controlled the flow of blood.
I had never considered the sun disk could be sitting on a crescent moon. I had always been taught/read that they were Hathor horns. Interesting to think that there could be double symbolism .
I find myself curious about the linguistics involved in studying ancient Egypt. I've heard many different pronunciations of the names of a lot of the deities, and I'm interested to know more about what evidence we have for each pronunciation. For example, I've more often heard Seth pronounced like "set," instead of like the modern name. I've also heard Thoth pronounced "thawth," "thohth," and "tote" by various sources. I'd love to know more about where these different opinions on pronunciations come from, and which ones seem more likely to be historically accurate!
The way these names are pronounced is very likely influenced by the mother tongue of the speaker attempting to pronounce such ancient Egyptian names. In many languages the "h" is silent, but in others it demands pronunciation and alters the way you read a word or name. In the specific case of Seth and Thoth, the presence of the "h" might be exactly why different people will have very different ideas of how they're should sound like. In my eyes when it comes to Seth we should pronounce the "h", but in Thoth I refrain from pronouncing the second one to simplify things so it quite literally sounds like the word thought. It simply roles off the tongue better that way, at least for me. As a reference I am a native Portuguese (Europe) speaker.
I've studied Egyptian for years and here's what I can tell you - First off, Egyptian phonetic hieroglyphs spell things like abjads rather than an alphabet, so kind of like Arabic spelling but without diacritics to depict the sounds. That means most vowel sounds from middle Egyptian (the main variety, spoken in the Egyptian Middle Kingdom and era of the pyramids) are reconstructions based on the word's derivatives in Coptic, the later variety of Egyptian spoken when they were conquered by Alexander the Great and were translated into Greek. However some vowels are still written, both of which give fairly good educated guesses as to the exact pronunciation. Specifically, "Seth" is actually spelled Swtkh in Egyptian, which would be pronounced like "suu- tekh" (سوطج)with a long low u sound and the kh being like the chhhh sound like in the Scottish "Loch" or German "nacht" or خ in Arabic. The "th" is more often than not used for an aspirated dental explosive, like an emphasized "T" sound with an extra little puff of air between your teeth as you say it (ط in Arabic). Thoth uses one of these dental plosives as its last consonant. Thoth/Thwth is actually Djh.wth in Egyptian, with a dja like in "Django" then a ch like ح in arabic or in the german "nicht" , then a low and long u/w sound, then the dental plosive - دجاحوط in Egyptian Arabic. 'Thoth' in English comes from the Greek translation of دجاحوط، دجاحوطي which is θοθ or θώθ, pronounced like thuwth in ancient Greek, thóth in modern greek and تحوت in modern Arabic. Khonshu or Khonšu is pronounced like Khan but with a khhhh خ sound, and a š or ش which is a sch sound like in "show" or خونشو in Arabic
@@zackmoon592 Amazing insights, thank you for highly detailed information and for taking the time to explain it all. I'm sure many will find this comment very useful.
@@zackmoon592 Absolutely fascinating! So, to clarify, you're saying Thoth/Thwth would be pronounced something like [ʤçutʰ]? I'm making some guesses on the IPA there, because my knowledge of it comes from a singing perspective (focused on Western European Classical music, mostly) more than a linguistic one. And now that you mention it, I have definitely seen Seth/Swtkh spelled and pronounced as Sutekh or something similar, but I don't think I ever made the connection that those were the same name! It makes sense, though, now that you point out the connection. I assume the situation with Re, whom I've more commonly seen and heard of as Ra, is the same, where the original vowel wasn't encoded in the hieroglyphs, so our modern pronunciations come from Greek and/or Coptic, but if I'm wrong on that assumption, I'd love to know more!
@@maxanaxam6935 happy to help! And yes, exactly! The IPA you spelled out is more or less EXACTLY how you say it in Egyptian! Seth and Sutekh are one in the same, usually Sutekh in Egyptian texts but the simpler Seth in English ones - generally Egyptologists and linguists use the anglicized versions because it's easier unless it's for an actual academic publication. There's a website called Omniglot which can teach you the basics of how to read phonetic Hieroglyphs. They come in 3 main varieties - 1 syllable, 2 consonant, and 3 consonant glyphs. It's believed that Egyptian used a similar sort of nonconcatenative morphological structure like all other afro-asiatic languages (like Hebrew, Phoenician, Arabic etc), so in simple terms the consonants will be the same and in the same order, but can mean different things with different vowel sounds plugged into/after them. The other main type is Determinative Glyphs, which are the picture ones people are more familiar with because it's usually a little drawing of the object. For example Cat in middle Egyptian is Mîw, spelled M (owl glyph) I/Y (Reed plant glyph) W (baby chicken glyph) with a glyph that's little picture of a cat afterwards to show what it was. For a god like Iah the moon God, it's spelled with the phonetic characters Y(reed glyph) Ā(arm glyph) H. (Tied knot glyph) in a cartouche (which is a little loop thing around formal names), followed by a crescent moon (also sometimes with the word Netcher [pronounced like neh-chair] or a picture of the god himself). Gabor Toth, the prof of Egyptology at Rutgers university has a free book called "Middle Egyptian Grammar through Literature" that you should be able to find a pdf of online
thank you for teaching us all a little more both about Egyptian mythology and the sources of our popular culture, that is something I think people should take into account more often rather than assuming that mythical characters on their tvs are what ancient people believed them to be like
I've studied Egyptian for years and here's what I can tell you - First off, Egyptian phonetic hieroglyphs spell things like abjads rather than an alphabet, so kind of like Arabic spelling but without diacritics to depict the sounds. That means most vowel sounds from middle Egyptian (the main variety, spoken in the Egyptian Middle Kingdom and era of the pyramids) are reconstructions based on the word's derivatives in Coptic, the later variety of Egyptian spoken when they were conquered by Alexander the Great and were translated into Greek. However some vowels are still written, both of which give fairly good educated guesses as to the exact pronunciation. Specifically, "Seth" is actually spelled Swtkh in Egyptian, which would be pronounced like "suu- tekh" (سوطج)with a long low u sound and the kh being like the chhhh sound like in the Scottish "Loch" or German "nacht" or خ in Arabic. The "th" is more often than not used for an aspirated dental explosive, like an emphasized "T" sound with an extra little puff of air between your teeth as you say it (ط in Arabic). Thoth uses one of these dental plosives as its last consonant. Thoth/Thwth is actually Djh.wth in Egyptian, with a dja like in "Django" then a ch like ح in arabic or in the german "nicht" , then a low and long u/w sound, then the dental plosive - دجاحوط in Egyptian Arabic. 'Thoth' in English comes from the Greek translation of دجاحوط، دجاحوطي which is θοθ or θώθ, pronounced like thuwth in ancient Greek, thóth in modern greek and تحوت in modern Arabic. Khonshu or Khonšu is pronounced like Khan but with a khhhh خ sound, and a š or ش which is a sch sound like in "show" or خونشو in Arabic
I'm Egyptian and i just don't understand something that you said. ح is not pronounced like the ch in nicht at all (I'm learning german too). a letter in the arabic alphabet that would better suit that sound would be ش
Quick thought, Khonsu was thought to mean "placenta" which is can sometimes still cover a baby during birth, or at least it comes out after the birth, the idea of something that passes from "one side to the other," in this case from the womb to outside the womb, might have been the link to the idea of the moon's phases. The connection of menstrual cycles, moon phases, and the placenta could be construed as connected.
i think it also makes sense that, if the pharaoh is an incarnation of the sun god, then it stands to reason that the placenta, being a connected but nonliving counterpart to the birth of the king, is easy to associate with the connected but less central figure of the moon god
If we're in an electromagnetic resumes with another planetary body then the radiating in resonance create a new sphere of influence equal and opposite reactions every single motion has them, what would be an equal and opposite reaction of having a sun?
@@shadowlitten547 I will certainly try to help anyone who would ask, all matter has a sound God said let there be light for the sound of God's voice created light so anyting perceptible is a noise and anything not heard it's felt, if my noise reaches a certain parameter of influence that is now called my spear or my plane if it has reached its how good is then stacked creating a cell
This cell contains all that there is of that Witches perceivable by anything within if somehow a new Nordic Mableton as influence create newest match between 8 divide it becomes a conduit for a bridge of South which is seen by its interaction with itself proposing in colors The Flash is receivable framerate make a Beretta 84 table a 5G Tower put in create Excel within a cell
Well Andrew, well done. I have always loved Egypt and it was my desire to visit there. A few years ago, I had the opportunity to take the grand Egyptian tour. Absolutely no regrets. Egyptian mythology rings close to the heart. I am convinced that it forms the basis of the civilizations that came after, including Judaism. I am not religious, but if I were, I would adopt the Egyptian pantheon as it is the most common sensical. This was a superb effort on your part and I always look forward to your UA-cam videos.
Very fascinating! If you haven’t already, can you please make a similar video for Odin and Thor. I absolutely love Norse Mythology and I’d be highly interested in viewing you work on Norse gods. More specifically Odin
Omg watching this just makes me love what marvel did with the comics. The fact that Konshu(comics) can acquire(steal) the abilities of other gods and the fact that Konsu in myth is connected to healing and Marc(moon knight) was dying when Konshu found him and when ever he puts his suit on he gets healed from any injury. Ahh just the little things like that are fun to see get carried into a movie version of the god
It's actually sort of surprising that Iah faith didn't catch on given the healing aspect. I'm mostly familiar with Japanese religion, but I think about how new temples to the Medicine Buddha were built whenever an important person got sick or a plague was spreading. Did Egypt already have other gods more strongly associated with healing?
Enjoyed the video. Learned a lot about how Khonsu, his personality, and how he evolved as a deity. Interesting little tidbit: Khonsu's main temple at Karnak wasn't completed until the reign of Ramesses III of the 20th dynasty in the later part of the New Kingdom period.
Could be a stretch, but I enjoy that Khonsu in the pyramid texts aids the Pharaoh in consuming the gods to gain their power, and in a more recent run of marvel comics Khonshu as an antagonist to the Avengers sends Moon Knight out to steal and absorb the powers of the other mystically imbued superheroes to empower himself.
I showed Khonshu this video last night before I went to out on patrol. He was lost for words. He said he was gonna visit the creator of this vid in his dreams...
This is fascinating in understanding where much of WESTERN religion flows from. You have an amazing knowledge. So muchto experience in your subjects. THANKS SO MUCH FOR THIS. You have also given me a deeper understanding of my Juseo/Christian history and faith.
Bible is edited multiple times by different councils. Gospel of st thomas is the most important esoteric Gospel which was removed because it talked about spiritual awakening and enlightenment like eastern religions.
Well… Re doesn’t exactly have alter egos. They’re deities of other Egyptian pantheons that became associated with Ra. Even Osiris is a deity that he merges with. It’s Egyptian syncretic deities. The deities actually merge with other deities. Often the deities Re merges with are deities associated with the sun, creation, or leadership. For example Khepri is a dung beetle that rolls the sun across the sky. Atum is a creator deity. Osiris is associated with leadership. Even Horus is Ra-horakti. Ra is strongly associated with the pharaoh, and thus any deity that is the head of a pantheon is associated with the pharaoh. The pharaoh would go around at different times of the year and perform different local rituals as king of the land. This merging of Ra or Horus with local deities was a form of religious rulership. It’s also important to note that most of the stuff we have written down is associated with the state religion. We don’t know a lot about local cultures, customs and stories because they weren’t written down.
I'm obsessed with theology and your vids have greatly helped me to become so passionate about it. I've always had so many questions. I love to learn about all religions and make connections between them all to really understand Christianity and the others better. Judaism, Christianity and Islam have many similarities. I love learning about Hinduism too as i have many Hindu friends. Kabbalah however is one of my favorites! Thanks for making these videos and teaching us! I love you brother! You are so intelligent and knowledgeable. If everyone could learn a little more about these religions and similarities and realize that we truly are all the same then maybe we could become a civilization that can learn to truly love one another. That would be ideal but I know it's not for everybody. It's important to have an open mind and rather than focussing on our differences, we need to find similarities with one another. I've learned to accept and love all my fellow man from studying religion (on my spare time on UA-cam).💗🙏✌
The way you talk about Egyptian gods makes them sound so much like modern Superheroes. Even with characters like Khonsu being slightly ret-conned to make him more interesting. That's very similar to characters in comics.
I can confirm that Khonsu is the proper spelling from the main sources I know of and who you are calling Re is spelt that way but pronounced R-ah, having the “E”being “AH” to give the “Ra” sound though I know sources do conflict on both names and really any name from ancient Egypt. Still a really cool video and very informative just slight pronunciation stuff same with Thoth being spelt that way but pronounced “Th-ah-th” and “Seth” being pronounced “S-et”.
Really enjoyed this episode. Long time viewer, but first time commenter, I like how clear and simple your posts are, but in depth as well. I've a special interest in Egyptian mythology and Christian studies (or should I say Christian mythology as well?;-)..) Like to see more on the complicated Egyptian pantheon of gods and such. Thanks again for your research and posts.
ancient egyptian religion/spirituality is the most convoluted one i know. seems to me like different regions started out with their own set of Gods and after Unification and throughout the civilisation's history, priests tried to develope a single pantheon
Watch Egyptology armchair videos he makes them bit easier to understand. it seems they watched nature so zoomly and through it they wanted to understand signs of life and its reality.
@@youreperfectstudio4789 nah the things we know of early Judaism speaks of it being a sect of canaanite religion. And the canaanite pantheon is structured fairly well for a pantheon
I'd love to see your take on the depictions of mythological figures in the Megami Tensei video game franchise. Khonsu himself recently played a fairly prominent supporting role in the most recent entry, Shin Megami Tensei V
I think you forgot to discuss the political side of Khonsu. About how he most likely became prominent above most other moon gods because of how the city state of Waset (Thebes) became the one who successfully reunified Egypt in the Middle Kingdom (later replacing Montuhotep's patron Montu), and more so in the New Kingdom when the Theban city state successfully expel the then-hated Hyksos.
Hey maybe you could do a video on Apollo. A god that underwent many changes in its interpretations apparently, and also my personal favorite from the Greek pantheon.
8:00: I heard of him first in slightly less-recent years, because the web serial _Worm_ named a secondary villain after him. I realize that that's way less prominent than Moon Knight's depiction, but I still find it interesting that there are multiple superhero stories where "Khonsu/shu" is an extremely powerful inhuman force lacking any connection to Khonsu's second-most-relevant characteristic, healing. I'll grant that Worm's Khonsu is even less mythologically-relevant than Moon Knight's; "Khonsu" is a name it's given to fit a preexisting naming convention that doesn't fit it well. It just looks kinda...moon-ey.
Just a thought but could the connection between Khonsu and helping a pharao consume gods be because of the moons ability to create tides and when the flooding occured after a tide the water "consumed" everything that wasnt safe? Problem: no way they could make a connection between the moon and tides back then right?
Pronouncing it like "ray" instead of "ra" is actually how scholars think Ra's name was said. It's why sometimes you'll see it written as Re instead of Ra so that the more correct pronunciation is more evident
I take the name change from Khonsu to Khonshu to be a worldbuilding thing. It implies that since this entity is real and has been around so long that his "name" has shifted with history
Would you do a video regarding African Brazilian religions like Candomblé and Umbanda? I feel that even here they are widely misunderstood by the majority of our population as well as being constantly attacked by some evangelical Christian leaders and institutions.
I feel like you may be forgetting that this was religion to these people not some made up tale for entertainment. They were not striving for a structurally sound story concept or character development. This was their actual belief system
What about the Myth of Nut and Ra. Nut (sky goddess) was pregnant of her brother Geb (earth god). Ra forbade her to give birth in any day of the year. Nut them gamble with Khonsu and gained enough moonlight that she was able to extend the year from 360 days to 365 days. In each extra day Nut gave birth to a different god. Osiris, Set, Heru-ur, Isis and Nephthys. I learned about this in Kane Chronicles.
From a mythological perspective maybe the reason for Ja's lack of personality was something to do with the obscurity that comes with night, which would be related to the moon for obvious reasons.
It strikes me that Horus' "moon eye" also seems to be blinking as it waxes and wanes every 28 days. It's interesting that's the one called the "whole eye" as well.
Wow I am stoked that you covered this. I love comics and history , mythology, etc and I'm a subscriber so this was really cool to see. Konshu is interesting and not nice in the comics. The imagery of the giant bird skeleton sect of priests is creepy and kinda cool but if they really took over a city like in the comics I would be beyond terrified
"He helped the deceased pharaoh capture and eat other gods to gain their divine power." !?!? I think we need to explore that little fact a bit more. Here I was thinking that the part in the book of dead where you tell your heart to shut up as you bold faced lie to the gods about never having committed a sin was an odd relationship to have.
Huh. Now it makes sense why, in the Disney+ series, Khonshu explicitly mentions is "healing armor". Knowing or not this is a nice play on the mythology of Khonsu as a healer, and his affinity for helping those in need.
Egyptian Mythology is my 2nd favorite Mythology and I'm not going to lie when I first heard about Moon Knight I didn't even realize Khonshu was meant to be Khonsu, I don't know why it took me so long to realize because the only difference is Khonshu has the extra letter, and he seems to be more about Vengeance than Healing. But yeah I didn't realize until like a few months after learning about Moon Knight. Anyway loved the video I knew very little about Khonsu before this video, all the research I've done didn't have much to say about him.
As far as pronunciation goes the director of Moon Knight is Egyptian (im pretty sure he’s actually from Egypt and speaks the language) so he’s probably pronouncing it the way he knows how
We're talking about Moon Knight's Khonshu vs IRL Khonshu when Stan Lee wasn't even trying to be accurate when he wrote the much larger character Thor into the comics.
"To go back and forth" And "Helps feed the king" Put together seams to mean "Royal waiter." with the moon possibly being a silver plate that would be carried "Full:New moon" then brought away "empty:Full moon." To add the disc on his head was the plate as well, they carry heavy large objects on there heads, like jugs of water or large dishes of food.
9:04 As someone who writes, I avoid using the “canonized” names of gods in referencing them; typically adding letters or mixing them or or replacing them with similar letters. Why? Just in case they do be real.
Khonshu’s spelling and pronunciation is not a mistake. Just like the names of most of the Egyptian gods, it has multiple pronunciations and spellings. I knew about Khonshu before Moon Knight but I’ve never seen it spelled Khonsu before.
Would you cover goddesses of the ancient world? I feel there aren't many who do. And if anyone can put links here for some videos about goddesses please do 🥰 thank youuuuu I love your videos, you're amazing!
So not only did the Egyptians master mathematics and engineering to create one of the largest and most incredible wonders of the world, but they also managed to invent astronomy and build a surprisingly accurate explanation for the functions of the moon and the sun
"during a new moon, the moon is completely invisible at night" ... invisible is a poor choice of words. It's below the horizon. During the new moon, the moon is high in the daytime sky.
Well noted. I certainly didn't mean to imply that it is present but invisible during the night. Should have been more careful with the way I said this. I'll watch out for things like this in the future.
Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/w5ka30scecC
Your videos have good info, editing, sound and lenght ... that being said with all respect your narration voice is very monotone
This absolutely nonsense.Sun cult came from NORTH where after harsh winter SUN is a life giving force that brings forth life compared Equatorial regions where WATER is life giving force and hence SERPENT cults developed in various polytheistic concepts.
If you would go and enjoy and worship Sun in desert you can prove your concept of life source without water in Egypt.
Hey there. I herd you on its probs not aliens and a lot of these vids seem pretty cool. So a sub from me. Gonna go browsing. For a while.
only if you cover Thoth. Disregard. You did. Thoth is my homie
First time I have heard someone say Re instead of Ra. bot can be right but Ra is the one I have heard more.
In the beginning of the video when you were talking about the lack of light pollution, it occurred to me a full moon could make traveling by night possible and safer. The etymology of ‘to go back and forth’ could have a second meaning that Khonsu was a patron god of travelers as well.
Interesting I like the study of word origins and want to start learning more Etymology.
I once went camping out in the Utah desert. It was a full moon and it was so bright that I cast a clear shadow from its light.
Maybe even relating to the tides. I think that they knew that the tides were tied to the moon in some way back then.
@@OnliPhans_Kenobi the problem with Egyptology that it is so old fashioned and they don't allow new ideas in and they think that must be some form of constitution. in reality egyptian history is still not fully understood especially their view of death.
@@starcapture3040 Yes and no, I am currently a research fellow in Egyptology at one of the best universities and I only got the fellowship because of my new ideas. Many other Egyptologists are indeed old fashioned so you are indeed correct about that.
Khonsu was actually mentioned in Night at the Museum 3 the Tablet of Ahkmenrah which gives life to wax figures is actually powered by Khonsu.
Stele of revealing......The stele was first displayed in the former Boulaq Museum with the interesting inventory number 666 .... Crowley wrote down his wifes "utterances" which became the "Book of the Law"
So that's why they only come to life at night
@@redjirachi1 Yup
I like the backstory for Marvel's Konshu a lot more than the backstory for Thor, Odin, and gang. The Asgardians are aliens that inspired the Norse myths. Konshu is an alien that pretends to be the Egyptian Konsu. I think that better explains the differences between Konshu and Konsu
Konshu isn't and "alien" in Marvel comics, he's an actual deity, along with the Asgardians as well. Now in the MCU yeah it's kinda up for debate, but as for the comics they're actual conceptual beings.
@@8-bitOverlord so basically a alien?
@@8-bitOverlord No. When Knull came to Earth he even claimed that my daddy was a Elder God that came to Earth. Take that as you will... Khonshu’s will.
@@Aristocratic13 yeah I know. Doesn't change the fact that he's a God which was my whole point.😂 lol "my daddy"
Khonshu in the comics is very much a good, from the overvoid actually. He’s as much a god as Anubis and Set, who he has had scuffles with through his avatars.
9:42 the story where Khonsu helps a pharaoh steal powers from gods reminded me of the story arc in the comics called "age of Khonshu" where Khonshu helps his champion (the titular moon knight) steal the powers of the Avengers and a bunch of other superheroes, I fell it's likely that the comic writers got the idea of the story arc from the myth
I always like it when writers take aspects from mythology such as stories and translate it into a modern medium.
"Do you swear to protect the travelers of the night and bring my vengeance to those who would do them harm?"
"yes"
"Then rise. Rise again. AS MY FIST OF VENGEANCE! AS MY MOON KNIGHT."
Yes😎
Funny how Khonsu in Egyptian myth is a god of healing; whereas in the comics, it feels like he's a god of the exact opposite.
khonsu is both, its the fallen Angel Adriel; has two personas, one heals (the biblical evil is aids, khonsu blood cured aids) his other persona is death, its the angel of death.
@@chocolatefigure01 you know nothing about this.
In the earlier myths he was a slaughterer. He’s also associated with protecting travelers at night.
@@sorayatorchic very true, i know nothing.
His depiction in Old Kingdom of Egypt especially in Cannibal Hymn is vastly different from that in New Kingdom depiction, he is depicted almost like a Cannibal who eats other god's hearts.(although he was a lesser prominent god and not known much about other than this )
' Khonsu who lives on hearts '.
But in New Kingdom of Egypt, he is the son of Amun and Mut -part of Theban or Creation triad along with them and associated with Moon and he's protector of night time travellers, healer and fertility.
If y'all haven't read any Moon Knight comics, literally PLEASE do yourself the service of reading Moon Knight vol8 from 2016-2017. Actual comic book masterpieces right there
Moon Knight's Khonshu is pretty much like Khonsu of Old Kingdom because at that time in Cannibal Hymn texts he is depicted as a bloodthirsty god and almost like a cannibal eats other god's hearts to gain power(but the comicbook counterpart is not a cannibal , he is more of a vengeful and bloodthirsty deity).
Ah, Lemire's run.. a true masterpiece, I'd Also like to add to your list 2014 moon knight run by Warren Ellise. Anoother Masterpiece that I wish all comics that came after followed.. (except for Lemire's, the 2016 is Incredible as is. No changes needed)
MCU hater
@@lazyvoid7107 just because you like the comics doesn't mean you hate the MCU
@@lazyvoid7107 MCU lore is inferior to comics lore for sure but why such a dumb and unecessary phrase is brought up by you?
Fascinating to observe how the portfolios of various deities evolved over time. It reads like fan fiction, the story always changing as younger generations' headcanon supplants that of older generations.
Wonder where that will leave Yahve in a few thousands year
Pete Davidson will be worshipped 2000 years from now as the Jesus of his time
@@revariox189 I mean, White American Evangelical Jesus is nothing at all like biblical Jesus. (I somehow doubt Yeshua would be into guns and Prosperity Gospel and the whole mega church phenomenon make zero sense whatsoever).
@@MacNif If that's the case, I'm certain there will be a schismatic sect that believes Yeezus died for their sins.
@@revariox189 I mean, he went from being El, the babylonian God. To Elohim, to Yahweh. He went from being one God among many, to the most powerful among Gods, to the only God. He went from being the God of War to being the God of love. He went to being one person, to being a trinity. He went from being very quick to anger and very vindictive to being very forgiving.
And before anyone says, he was always both or the current image of God is what he always was... read the bible. There is never mention of many of these things, until the New Testament.
For example, the Holy trinity, it is until the Gospels where the holy spirit is for the very fist time mentioned. There is also no mention of Jesus or God having a son, until the Gospels. God is also the God of War, and is constantly referred to that way, and he is asked Israel plenty of times to go to war, unprovoked. But suddenly Jesus, is all against war and violence, he talks about love and forgiveness...
So in the end, Christianity is not that different.
Couldn't be more interesting or better researched! A wonderful video that I am privileged to have seen, thank you!
I didn't even knew that Khonshu was based on a real deity from Egypthian religion. Because in the few comics I saw him, Khonshu was represented as a faceless white Pharaon (sort of an Nyarlathotep with the colors inverted) and because Marvel went back and forth between Khonshu being a real entity and just an allucination caused by Marc Spector's mental illness, I just assumed he was invented by the comicbook writers. Is fascinating to know thar Khonsu is real (also, for some reason the god's name is apparently spelled "Jonsu" in Spanish)
Maybe he's just a figment of your imagination?
Ooooooooooohhhhhhhohhhhhhohhh 👻
(Seriously though, I was in the same boat. I thought he was fiction for the longest time)
Spanish “Jonsu” is actually closer to the Ancient Egyptian pronunciation-the sound would’ve been similar to Spanish J, rather than English K, which is represented as just “k” in transliteration
The connection of the moon to healing reminds me of the medieval belief that bleeding a patient should be considered according to the phases of the moon, for just as the moon controlled the flood of tides, it also controlled the flow of blood.
I had never considered the sun disk could be sitting on a crescent moon. I had always been taught/read that they were Hathor horns. Interesting to think that there could be double symbolism .
A wonderfully narrated episode, as always.Thank you very much.At my advanced age I love to learn so many interesting stories from you.
I find myself curious about the linguistics involved in studying ancient Egypt. I've heard many different pronunciations of the names of a lot of the deities, and I'm interested to know more about what evidence we have for each pronunciation. For example, I've more often heard Seth pronounced like "set," instead of like the modern name. I've also heard Thoth pronounced "thawth," "thohth," and "tote" by various sources. I'd love to know more about where these different opinions on pronunciations come from, and which ones seem more likely to be historically accurate!
The way these names are pronounced is very likely influenced by the mother tongue of the speaker attempting to pronounce such ancient Egyptian names. In many languages the "h" is silent, but in others it demands pronunciation and alters the way you read a word or name. In the specific case of Seth and Thoth, the presence of the "h" might be exactly why different people will have very different ideas of how they're should sound like.
In my eyes when it comes to Seth we should pronounce the "h", but in Thoth I refrain from pronouncing the second one to simplify things so it quite literally sounds like the word thought. It simply roles off the tongue better that way, at least for me. As a reference I am a native Portuguese (Europe) speaker.
I've studied Egyptian for years and here's what I can tell you - First off, Egyptian phonetic hieroglyphs spell things like abjads rather than an alphabet, so kind of like Arabic spelling but without diacritics to depict the sounds. That means most vowel sounds from middle Egyptian (the main variety, spoken in the Egyptian Middle Kingdom and era of the pyramids) are reconstructions based on the word's derivatives in Coptic, the later variety of Egyptian spoken when they were conquered by Alexander the Great and were translated into Greek. However some vowels are still written, both of which give fairly good educated guesses as to the exact pronunciation.
Specifically, "Seth" is actually spelled Swtkh in Egyptian, which would be pronounced like "suu- tekh" (سوطج)with a long low u sound and the kh being like the chhhh sound like in the Scottish "Loch" or German "nacht" or خ in Arabic. The "th" is more often than not used for an aspirated dental explosive, like an emphasized "T" sound with an extra little puff of air between your teeth as you say it (ط in Arabic). Thoth uses one of these dental plosives as its last consonant. Thoth/Thwth is actually Djh.wth in Egyptian, with a dja like in "Django" then a ch like ح in arabic or in the german "nicht" , then a low and long u/w sound, then the dental plosive - دجاحوط in Egyptian Arabic. 'Thoth' in English comes from the Greek translation of دجاحوط، دجاحوطي which is θοθ or θώθ, pronounced like thuwth in ancient Greek, thóth in modern greek and تحوت in modern Arabic. Khonshu or Khonšu is pronounced like Khan but with a khhhh خ sound, and a š or ش which is a sch sound like in "show" or خونشو in Arabic
@@zackmoon592 Amazing insights, thank you for highly detailed information and for taking the time to explain it all.
I'm sure many will find this comment very useful.
@@zackmoon592 Absolutely fascinating! So, to clarify, you're saying Thoth/Thwth would be pronounced something like [ʤçutʰ]? I'm making some guesses on the IPA there, because my knowledge of it comes from a singing perspective (focused on Western European Classical music, mostly) more than a linguistic one.
And now that you mention it, I have definitely seen Seth/Swtkh spelled and pronounced as Sutekh or something similar, but I don't think I ever made the connection that those were the same name! It makes sense, though, now that you point out the connection.
I assume the situation with Re, whom I've more commonly seen and heard of as Ra, is the same, where the original vowel wasn't encoded in the hieroglyphs, so our modern pronunciations come from Greek and/or Coptic, but if I'm wrong on that assumption, I'd love to know more!
@@maxanaxam6935 happy to help! And yes, exactly! The IPA you spelled out is more or less EXACTLY how you say it in Egyptian! Seth and Sutekh are one in the same, usually Sutekh in Egyptian texts but the simpler Seth in English ones - generally Egyptologists and linguists use the anglicized versions because it's easier unless it's for an actual academic publication. There's a website called Omniglot which can teach you the basics of how to read phonetic Hieroglyphs. They come in 3 main varieties - 1 syllable, 2 consonant, and 3 consonant glyphs. It's believed that Egyptian used a similar sort of nonconcatenative morphological structure like all other afro-asiatic languages (like Hebrew, Phoenician, Arabic etc), so in simple terms the consonants will be the same and in the same order, but can mean different things with different vowel sounds plugged into/after them. The other main type is Determinative Glyphs, which are the picture ones people are more familiar with because it's usually a little drawing of the object. For example Cat in middle Egyptian is Mîw, spelled M (owl glyph) I/Y (Reed plant glyph) W (baby chicken glyph) with a glyph that's little picture of a cat afterwards to show what it was. For a god like Iah the moon God, it's spelled with the phonetic characters Y(reed glyph) Ā(arm glyph) H. (Tied knot glyph) in a cartouche (which is a little loop thing around formal names), followed by a crescent moon (also sometimes with the word Netcher [pronounced like neh-chair] or a picture of the god himself). Gabor Toth, the prof of Egyptology at Rutgers university has a free book called "Middle Egyptian Grammar through Literature" that you should be able to find a pdf of online
thank you for teaching us all a little more both about Egyptian mythology and the sources of our popular culture, that is something I think people should take into account more often rather than assuming that mythical characters on their tvs are what ancient people believed them to be like
Thank you for your research integrity and digestable content.
I've studied Egyptian for years and here's what I can tell you - First off, Egyptian phonetic hieroglyphs spell things like abjads rather than an alphabet, so kind of like Arabic spelling but without diacritics to depict the sounds. That means most vowel sounds from middle Egyptian (the main variety, spoken in the Egyptian Middle Kingdom and era of the pyramids) are reconstructions based on the word's derivatives in Coptic, the later variety of Egyptian spoken when they were conquered by Alexander the Great and were translated into Greek. However some vowels are still written, both of which give fairly good educated guesses as to the exact pronunciation.
Specifically, "Seth" is actually spelled Swtkh in Egyptian, which would be pronounced like "suu- tekh" (سوطج)with a long low u sound and the kh being like the chhhh sound like in the Scottish "Loch" or German "nacht" or خ in Arabic. The "th" is more often than not used for an aspirated dental explosive, like an emphasized "T" sound with an extra little puff of air between your teeth as you say it (ط in Arabic). Thoth uses one of these dental plosives as its last consonant. Thoth/Thwth is actually Djh.wth in Egyptian, with a dja like in "Django" then a ch like ح in arabic or in the german "nicht" , then a low and long u/w sound, then the dental plosive - دجاحوط in Egyptian Arabic. 'Thoth' in English comes from the Greek translation of دجاحوط، دجاحوطي which is θοθ or θώθ, pronounced like thuwth in ancient Greek, thóth in modern greek and تحوت in modern Arabic. Khonshu or Khonšu is pronounced like Khan but with a khhhh خ sound, and a š or ش which is a sch sound like in "show" or خونشو in Arabic
U lost me on loch
i only understood the first one the others were so confusing- how do you keep track of phonetics?? its all so???
Thankyou
Thank you
I'm Egyptian and i just don't understand something that you said. ح is not pronounced like the ch in nicht at all (I'm learning german too). a letter in the arabic alphabet that would better suit that sound would be ش
Quick thought, Khonsu was thought to mean "placenta" which is can sometimes still cover a baby during birth, or at least it comes out after the birth, the idea of something that passes from "one side to the other," in this case from the womb to outside the womb, might have been the link to the idea of the moon's phases. The connection of menstrual cycles, moon phases, and the placenta could be construed as connected.
i think it also makes sense that, if the pharaoh is an incarnation of the sun god, then it stands to reason that the placenta, being a connected but nonliving counterpart to the birth of the king, is easy to associate with the connected but less central figure of the moon god
If we're in an electromagnetic resumes with another planetary body then the radiating in resonance create a new sphere of influence equal and opposite reactions every single motion has them, what would be an equal and opposite reaction of having a sun?
@@jeremyhawkins8512 Can you explain that in simpler terms?
@@shadowlitten547 I will certainly try to help anyone who would ask, all matter has a sound God said let there be light for the sound of God's voice created light so anyting perceptible is a noise and anything not heard it's felt, if my noise reaches a certain parameter of influence that is now called my spear or my plane if it has reached its how good is then stacked creating a cell
This cell contains all that there is of that Witches perceivable by anything within if somehow a new Nordic Mableton as influence create newest match between 8 divide it becomes a conduit for a bridge of South which is seen by its interaction with itself proposing in colors The Flash is receivable framerate make a Beretta 84 table a 5G Tower put in create Excel within a cell
Well Andrew, well done. I have always loved Egypt and it was my desire to visit there. A few years ago, I had the opportunity to take the grand Egyptian tour. Absolutely no regrets. Egyptian mythology rings close to the heart. I am convinced that it forms the basis of the civilizations that came after, including Judaism. I am not religious, but if I were, I would adopt the Egyptian pantheon as it is the most common sensical. This was a superb effort on your part and I always look forward to your UA-cam videos.
Very fascinating!
If you haven’t already, can you please make a similar video for Odin and Thor. I absolutely love Norse Mythology and I’d be highly interested in viewing you work on Norse gods. More specifically Odin
Omg watching this just makes me love what marvel did with the comics. The fact that Konshu(comics) can acquire(steal) the abilities of other gods and the fact that Konsu in myth is connected to healing and Marc(moon knight) was dying when Konshu found him and when ever he puts his suit on he gets healed from any injury. Ahh just the little things like that are fun to see get carried into a movie version of the god
It is amazing that I come from Egypt to learn about my history from a lovely American scholar. Thank you
It's actually sort of surprising that Iah faith didn't catch on given the healing aspect. I'm mostly familiar with Japanese religion, but I think about how new temples to the Medicine Buddha were built whenever an important person got sick or a plague was spreading. Did Egypt already have other gods more strongly associated with healing?
There were a few. My favorite is the scorpion goddess, Serqet 🦂
Ah yes the old "king's placenta" and "go back and forth" conundrum. I get those two confused all the time. What a classic
Enjoyed the video. Learned a lot about how Khonsu, his personality, and how he evolved as a deity. Interesting little tidbit: Khonsu's main temple at Karnak wasn't completed until the reign of Ramesses III of the 20th dynasty in the later part of the New Kingdom period.
such good research and the video is so well made too!
Yesss always excited for new episodes!
I suppose Moon Knight 'heals' the stupidity from villains with a sound beating. Lol
Could be a stretch, but I enjoy that Khonsu in the pyramid texts aids the Pharaoh in consuming the gods to gain their power, and in a more recent run of marvel comics Khonshu as an antagonist to the Avengers sends Moon Knight out to steal and absorb the powers of the other mystically imbued superheroes to empower himself.
Thank you for doing this video. It was very informative. Please do more videos on Egyptian Gods.
I showed Khonshu this video last night before I went to out on patrol. He was lost for words. He said he was gonna visit the creator of this vid in his dreams...
This is fascinating in understanding where much of WESTERN religion flows from. You have an amazing knowledge. So muchto experience in your subjects. THANKS SO MUCH FOR THIS. You have also given me a deeper understanding of my Juseo/Christian history and faith.
Bible is edited multiple times by different councils. Gospel of st thomas is the most important esoteric Gospel which was removed because it talked about spiritual awakening and enlightenment like eastern religions.
Jews started worship sun god in egypt slavery, jesus said to judas those worship wrong god, jews worship other planet before slavery
Well… Re doesn’t exactly have alter egos. They’re deities of other Egyptian pantheons that became associated with Ra. Even Osiris is a deity that he merges with. It’s Egyptian syncretic deities. The deities actually merge with other deities. Often the deities Re merges with are deities associated with the sun, creation, or leadership. For example Khepri is a dung beetle that rolls the sun across the sky. Atum is a creator deity. Osiris is associated with leadership. Even Horus is Ra-horakti. Ra is strongly associated with the pharaoh, and thus any deity that is the head of a pantheon is associated with the pharaoh. The pharaoh would go around at different times of the year and perform different local rituals as king of the land. This merging of Ra or Horus with local deities was a form of religious rulership. It’s also important to note that most of the stuff we have written down is associated with the state religion. We don’t know a lot about local cultures, customs and stories because they weren’t written down.
"To go back and forth" is absolutely perfect for Moon Knight tbh
Love all these videos, but especially the ones on egyptian gods!
Thank you for the education provided on Egyptian mythology.
I'm obsessed with theology and your vids have greatly helped me to become so passionate about it. I've always had so many questions. I love to learn about all religions and make connections between them all to really understand Christianity and the others better. Judaism, Christianity and Islam have many similarities. I love learning about Hinduism too as i have many Hindu friends. Kabbalah however is one of my favorites! Thanks for making these videos and teaching us! I love you brother! You are so intelligent and knowledgeable. If everyone could learn a little more about these religions and similarities and realize that we truly are all the same then maybe we could become a civilization that can learn to truly love one another. That would be ideal but I know it's not for everybody. It's important to have an open mind and rather than focussing on our differences, we need to find similarities with one another. I've learned to accept and love all my fellow man from studying religion (on my spare time on UA-cam).💗🙏✌
The way you talk about Egyptian gods makes them sound so much like modern Superheroes. Even with characters like Khonsu being slightly ret-conned to make him more interesting. That's very similar to characters in comics.
If you ever make a video about the goddess Ma'at I will be forever grateful!
It would be interesting to know how she related to the other gods.
I can confirm that Khonsu is the proper spelling from the main sources I know of and who you are calling Re is spelt that way but pronounced R-ah, having the “E”being “AH” to give the “Ra” sound though I know sources do conflict on both names and really any name from ancient Egypt. Still a really cool video and very informative just slight pronunciation stuff same with Thoth being spelt that way but pronounced “Th-ah-th” and “Seth” being pronounced “S-et”.
Really enjoyed this episode. Long time viewer, but first time commenter, I like how clear and simple your posts are, but in depth as well. I've a special interest in Egyptian mythology and Christian studies (or should I say Christian mythology as well?;-)..) Like to see more on the complicated Egyptian pantheon of gods and such. Thanks again for your research and posts.
I love your channel, please talk about the new age belief system, I’ve been seeing it a lot in bookstores and movies nowadays
Getting ready for Moon Knight, professor?
The trailers have intrigued me. Cautiously optimistic it will be good.
ancient egyptian religion/spirituality is the most convoluted one i know. seems to me like different regions started out with their own set of Gods and after Unification and throughout the civilisation's history, priests tried to develope a single pantheon
One could say this about ancient Judaism also I think
Watch Egyptology armchair videos he makes them bit easier to understand. it seems they watched nature so zoomly and through it they wanted to understand signs of life and its reality.
@@youreperfectstudio4789 nah the things we know of early Judaism speaks of it being a sect of canaanite religion. And the canaanite pantheon is structured fairly well for a pantheon
We want more about ancient Egypt !
I'd love to see your take on the depictions of mythological figures in the Megami Tensei video game franchise. Khonsu himself recently played a fairly prominent supporting role in the most recent entry, Shin Megami Tensei V
Very thorough scholarship. Great video.
I think you forgot to discuss the political side of Khonsu. About how he most likely became prominent above most other moon gods because of how the city state of Waset (Thebes) became the one who successfully reunified Egypt in the Middle Kingdom (later replacing Montuhotep's patron Montu), and more so in the New Kingdom when the Theban city state successfully expel the then-hated Hyksos.
Hoping for a video on ancient Sumerian/Assyrian religion soon! 👍
Hey maybe you could do a video on Apollo. A god that underwent many changes in its interpretations apparently, and also my personal favorite from the Greek pantheon.
8:00: I heard of him first in slightly less-recent years, because the web serial _Worm_ named a secondary villain after him. I realize that that's way less prominent than Moon Knight's depiction, but I still find it interesting that there are multiple superhero stories where "Khonsu/shu" is an extremely powerful inhuman force lacking any connection to Khonsu's second-most-relevant characteristic, healing.
I'll grant that Worm's Khonsu is even less mythologically-relevant than Moon Knight's; "Khonsu" is a name it's given to fit a preexisting naming convention that doesn't fit it well. It just looks kinda...moon-ey.
And I heard of him from Rick Riordan's Kane books. He's not one of the really famous gods, but he seems to crop up in pop culture from time to time.
Khonsu is not a villain!!
Khonsu is the Shadow Name of one of Mage: the Awakening's signature characters.
Funny how he keeps appearing in different places. I clicked partly because he shows up in Shin Megami Tensei
Well he was also mentioned in Night at the Museum 3 the Tablet of Ahkmenrah which gives life to wax figures is actually powered by Khonsu.
Great video, thank you for sharing!
10:06 Now the logic in the 3rd episode makes sense.
**spoilers**
"remembering the night sky" doesn't require manipulating the whole visible universe.
Just a thought but could the connection between Khonsu and helping a pharao consume gods be because of the moons ability to create tides and when the flooding occured after a tide the water "consumed" everything that wasnt safe? Problem: no way they could make a connection between the moon and tides back then right?
It's a good question.
Especially since this aspect of Khonsu is from very early in Egyptian history.
I never heard Re being used only Ra, great vídeo!!
It makes alot more sense why khonshu's suit heals mark now. I was like 'if he's a moon god how come how come he can heal?'
Dude I can't get over the fact that you pronounced the eye of ra like Star wars Rey... everything else was amazing...
Pronouncing it like "ray" instead of "ra" is actually how scholars think Ra's name was said. It's why sometimes you'll see it written as Re instead of Ra so that the more correct pronunciation is more evident
I take the name change from Khonsu to Khonshu to be a worldbuilding thing. It implies that since this entity is real and has been around so long that his "name" has shifted with history
Would you do a video regarding African Brazilian religions like Candomblé and Umbanda? I feel that even here they are widely misunderstood by the majority of our population as well as being constantly attacked by some evangelical Christian leaders and institutions.
Always like before watching
I feel like you may be forgetting that this was religion to these people not some made up tale for entertainment. They were not striving for a structurally sound story concept or character development. This was their actual belief system
Very good. This information was so unifying for my understanding.
What about the Myth of Nut and Ra.
Nut (sky goddess) was pregnant of her brother Geb (earth god). Ra forbade her to give birth in any day of the year. Nut them gamble with Khonsu and gained enough moonlight that she was able to extend the year from 360 days to 365 days.
In each extra day Nut gave birth to a different god. Osiris, Set, Heru-ur, Isis and Nephthys.
I learned about this in Kane Chronicles.
Please do:
1) omnism
2) Unitarian Universalism
3) Bahaí
4) prisca theologian
5) perennial philosophy
6) hermetcism
7)
Praise Khonshu we have a Khonshu video finally.
Nice work as always.
Wow, that ending really hit me in the face, it was over before I could even process.
From a mythological perspective maybe the reason for Ja's lack of personality was something to do with the obscurity that comes with night, which would be related to the moon for obvious reasons.
It strikes me that Horus' "moon eye" also seems to be blinking as it waxes and wanes every 28 days. It's interesting that's the one called the "whole eye" as well.
Wow I am stoked that you covered this. I love comics and history , mythology, etc and I'm a subscriber so this was really cool to see. Konshu is interesting and not nice in the comics. The imagery of the giant bird skeleton sect of priests is creepy and kinda cool but if they really took over a city like in the comics I would be beyond terrified
"He helped the deceased pharaoh capture and eat other gods to gain their divine power."
!?!? I think we need to explore that little fact a bit more. Here I was thinking that the part in the book of dead where you tell your heart to shut up as you bold faced lie to the gods about never having committed a sin was an odd relationship to have.
Huh. Now it makes sense why, in the Disney+ series, Khonshu explicitly mentions is "healing armor". Knowing or not this is a nice play on the mythology of Khonsu as a healer, and his affinity for helping those in need.
Great stuff!
Egyptian Mythology is my 2nd favorite Mythology and I'm not going to lie when I first heard about Moon Knight I didn't even realize Khonshu was meant to be Khonsu, I don't know why it took me so long to realize because the only difference is Khonshu has the extra letter, and he seems to be more about Vengeance than Healing. But yeah I didn't realize until like a few months after learning about Moon Knight.
Anyway loved the video I knew very little about Khonsu before this video, all the research I've done didn't have much to say about him.
I love these types of videos where you take a fictional character and tie it back to real world history. Please do more!
Thank U 4 these videos Sir.🙏🏿🆙🔥🔥🇯🇲
Wanted to know about it,thanks for the video
As far as pronunciation goes the director of Moon Knight is Egyptian (im pretty sure he’s actually from Egypt and speaks the language) so he’s probably pronouncing it the way he knows how
Really interesting. New suscriber!
very interesting by more videos about Ancient Egypt 👍🏼👍🏼
Really enjoyed it
Thank you love this explanation
We're talking about Moon Knight's Khonshu vs IRL Khonshu when Stan Lee wasn't even trying to be accurate when he wrote the much larger character Thor into the comics.
"To go back and forth" And "Helps feed the king" Put together seams to mean "Royal waiter." with the moon possibly being a silver plate that would be carried "Full:New moon" then brought away "empty:Full moon." To add the disc on his head was the plate as well, they carry heavy large objects on there heads, like jugs of water or large dishes of food.
Really enjoyed this, would love an episode on the God, Heka.
Ah, had distillation been known in Ancient Egypt, Khonsu might have been the god of moonshine
9:04 As someone who writes, I avoid using the “canonized” names of gods in referencing them; typically adding letters or mixing them or or replacing them with similar letters. Why? Just in case they do be real.
Khonshu’s spelling and pronunciation is not a mistake. Just like the names of most of the Egyptian gods, it has multiple pronunciations and spellings. I knew about Khonshu before Moon Knight but I’ve never seen it spelled Khonsu before.
Thoth was also viewed as a magician.
Thoth my big homie🤞
Would you cover goddesses of the ancient world? I feel there aren't many who do. And if anyone can put links here for some videos about goddesses please do 🥰 thank youuuuu I love your videos, you're amazing!
most other religions feel like algebra, Ancient egyptian myth feels like advanced calculus
Great content.
The sun and moon being the eyes of Horus reminds me of Odin sorta with like one eye being open and the other one being closed/missing ya know?
So not only did the Egyptians master mathematics and engineering to create one of the largest and most incredible wonders of the world, but they also managed to invent astronomy and build a surprisingly accurate explanation for the functions of the moon and the sun
So interesting! I've never really heard anything on this before.
Other than the pronunciation of Re (Rah not Ray), terrific video sir.
"during a new moon, the moon is completely invisible at night" ... invisible is a poor choice of words. It's below the horizon. During the new moon, the moon is high in the daytime sky.
Well noted. I certainly didn't mean to imply that it is present but invisible during the night. Should have been more careful with the way I said this. I'll watch out for things like this in the future.
Cool channel, thanks!
Very good. You properly pronounced "Amun Ra" as "Ray" instead of "Rah"
Is this the proper pronunciation?
Its actually Raa not Ray
@@MichelNabil okay genius. I spelled it according to how it's pronounced.
@@aurionc2468 yes
@@devin3607 i know that, im telling you he pronounced it wrong, its Raa not Re nor Ray ... Raaaa