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Topic: Kebehut


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  Writing.Com: Policy Of Truth
His sister Kebehut often insisted on coming, and he didn't try to argue with her; knowing how much the jackal god doted on her, he also knew the futility of making her stay behind.
He was easier to relate to than Kebehut, who cheerfully preferred chasing after insects and hopping about on the rocks near the river to simply walking among the trees thinking, as Imiut liked to do.
Kebehut had always been very close to her father, and he didn't doubt she would tell him what she'd seen.
www.writing.com /main/view_item/item_id/363827/rfrid/tehuti_88   (5928 words)

  
 Kebechet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
In Egyptian mythology, Kebechet (also known as Qebehet, Kebhut, Kebehut, Qebehut, and Kabechet) the goddess of freshness.
She was the daughter of Anubis (Anpu) and his consort Anput and was thought to assist her father in his role as the god of embalming.
Occasionally she takes the form of an ostrich, linking her to the goddess of Ma'at who represented justice or balance and was involved in the judgement of the dead.
www.ancientegyptonline.co.uk /kebechet.html   (175 words)

  
 Science Fair Projects - Origins beliefs
Anubis was the father of Kebehut, also known as Qébéhout, Kabechet and Kebhut.
Anubis's wife and Kebehut's mother was goddess Anput (Input, Inpewt, Yineput).
Plato, in his dialogue Timaeus, describes a creation myth involving a being called the demiurge.
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Origin_beliefs   (5167 words)

  
 FictionPress.Com Story : Forbidden Love   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Even Anubis had a daughter, the demigoddess Kebehut, who helped him in his sacred duties; strangely enough, the mother's name is never mentioned...
Anubis and Bastet remained consorts, though by order of Ra any record of their marriage was to be destroyed and Bastet’s name was erased from all of Kebehut’s birth records; Maahes, however, kept his mother’s name only considering the union with their father.
Anubis was absorbed in his duties and caring for his daughter, while Bastet continued to help her father in his duties as well as raising their son.
www.fictionpress.com /read.php?storyid=1263258   (11609 words)

  
 Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > God of Embalming
In one train of thought, it was believed that Isis raised him, as Set might murder his wife's illegitimate son, and so he grew up a friend and follower of Osiris.
He was thought to have a daughter known as Kebechet (Kabechet, Kebehut), who was depicted as a snake or ostrich carrying water.
She was the goddess of freshness and purification through water who washed the entrails of the deceased and brought the sacred water to Anubis for his tasks.
www.unexplained-mysteries.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t49564.html   (2367 words)

  
 Coming Home
Prince is the second sequel to Horus, and takes place in a sort of alternate-reality Kemet in which events were much different from those in Horus's reality.
In this particular timeline, Horus and Hathor had no children to claim the throne; Ra attempted to set up Anubis's daughter, the demigoddess Kebehut, as Horus's "daughter," and sent the god Set to take her from her father.
Instead, Set ended up turning her into his puppet queen, and cast a spell upon Horus which nearly killed him; the god Thoth cast his energy to place Horus in suspended animation, so both of them were out of the picture, at least until a cure could be found.
www.geocities.com /tehuti_88/cominghome.html   (3646 words)

  
 Skew: I claim this journal for New France!
Oh, speaking of TR, there's a storyline in there I mentioned in the Rainbow Rhino forum once and a mod commented that she'd love to see the end product.
Considering it's a serial, and one I haven't even had time to work on lately, I briefly fiddled with the idea of writing a "condensed" story (which would, nevertheless, be LONG--take a look at "Kebehut"!!) covering the storyline with Reseda and Silver, which is the part I commented about.
It would be a way to show that part of the story, without having to write the rest first; sort of like what I did with "Random Scene 3." I really like the dynamic between those two and would like to show it off, especially if someone wants to see it.
tehuti.diaryland.com /020928_1.html   (405 words)

  
 The Dreamforest: 06/15/01 Dreams
Okay, I thought; so Anubis must have somehow used an OBJECT to father his child.
But THEN I read further and realized the story had nothing to do with Kebehut at all.
This disappointed me--I was hoping for an explanation as to her parentage--but the story focused instead on some kind of quest or search Anubis went on, and this "Silverwand" had something to do with it, as an object of power.
tdreamjournal.tripod.com /2001/061501.html   (856 words)

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