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- Set in Egyptian Theology
-
- by Oz Tech
-
- Set was one of the earliest Egyptian deities, a god of the night
- identified with the northern stars. In the earliest ages of
- Egypt this Prince of Darkness was well regarded. One persistant
- token of this regard is the Tcham scepter, having the stylized
- head and tail of Set. The Tcham scepter is frequently found
- in portraits of other other gods as a symbol of magical power.
-
- In some texts he is hailed as a source of strength, and in
- early paintings he is portrayed as bearer of a harpoon at the
- prow of the boat of Ra, warding off the serpent Apep. Yet the
- warlike and resolute nature of Set seems to have been regarded
- with ambivalence in Egyptian theology, and the portrayal of this
- Neter went through many changes over a period of nearly three
- thousand years. Pictures of a god bearing two heads, that of
- Set and his daylight brother Horus the Elder, may be compared to the
- oriental Yin/Yang symbol as a representation of the union
- of polarities. In time, the conflict between these two abstract
- principles came to be emphasized rather than their primal union.
-
- Set's battle with Horus the Elder grew from being a statement of
- the duality of day and night into an expression of the political
- conflict among the polytheistic priesthoods for control of the
- Egyptian theocracy. This was rewritten as a battle between Good
- and Evil after Egypt expelled the Hyskos in the 18th Dynasty.
- Some say the Hyskos were Asiatic invaders, and others say they
- were an indigenous minority that seized control of the nation.
- This tribe ruled Egypt for a time and happened to favor the Set
- cult, seeing a resemblence to a storm-god of their own pantheon
-
- The Set cult never recovered from this identification with the Hyskos.
- mages of Set were destroyed or defaced. By the time
- Greek historians visited Egypt, wild asses, pigs, and other beasts
- identified with the Set cult were driven off cliffs, hacked into
- pieces or otherwise slaughtered at annual celebrations in a spirit
- akin to the driving out of the Biblical scapegoat. The report
- of these historians is often thought to be a valid account of a
- a timeless and immutable theocracy , but just looking at the
- frequency with which the ruling capital moved to different
- cities (each being a cult-center) is enough to dispel this idea.
- One controversial Egyptologist has suggested that the worship
- of Set might have predated the concept of paternity. Later cults
- incorporating a father god would reject this fatherless son.
- This introduces another bizarre factor in the transformation of the
- Night/Day battle between brothers into an inheritance dispute
- between Set and Horus the Younger. Any book on Egyptian myth you
- pick up contains the gory details of this cosmic lawsuit, which
- includes things that make DYNASTY look like a prayer breakfast.
- I have always been intrigued, though, that while all books affirm
- that Set tore Osiris to pieces, everybody knows about Osiris, and it
- is quite hard to collect the pieces of the puzzle that is Set.
- Egyptologists have never agreed what the animal used to symbolize
- Set actually is. Since the sages of ancient Egypt did not use an
- unrecognizable creature to represent any other major deity, we
- may guess that this is intentional, and points, like the Tcham
- sceptre, to an esoteric meaning.
-
- References:
- Budge, E.A. Wallis. THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS.
- Grant, Kenneth. CULTS OF THE SHADOW.
- Graves, Robert. THE WHITE GODDESS.
- Ions, Veronica. EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY.
- Massey, Gerald. THE NATURAL GENESIS.
- Russell, Jeffrey Burton. THE DEVIL.
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