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Topic: Satet


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In the News (Fri 11 Dec 09)

  
  Per-Heh: Satet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet's name was originally Satjit in Egyptian, however it was later changed and is reflected on subterranean jars which have been recovered from the Step Pyramid at Saqqara (Dynasty III).
Satet's name in hieroglyphs was first written as a shoulder-knot tie, however from the Middle Kingdom the writing of Her name changed into an animal skin, pierced by an arrow.
As "Mistress of Elephantine", Satet is the consort to Khnum, and by inference, the mother of Anuket.
www.per-heh.org /topics/neter/article/s/Satet.php   (125 words)

  
 Egypt: The Gods of Ancient Egypt - Satet (Setet, sathit, satit, sati, setis, satis)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
She was associated with the star Sirius A (the "Dog Star"), because the inundation coincided each year with the rising of that star.
Every year, Isis would shed a single tear, which would be caught by Satet in her jars, then poured into the Nile.
Satet, Archer-Goddess of the Inundation and the Nile Cataracts by Caroline Seawright
touregypt.net /godsofegypt/satet.htm   (134 words)

  
 Ancient Egyptian Mythology - Gods - Satet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet was the principal female counterpart of Khnemu and was worshipped with him at Elephantine (Abu).
Further, in the Pyramid Texts, Satet is described as cleansing the king with four jars of water from Elephantine.
Satet was the goddess of the inundation (yearly flooding of the Nile) and of fertility.
www.egyptianculture.net /Gods/satet.aspx   (124 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
SATET concluded that the maximum amount of influent ammonia, as nitrogen, that the Dye WCP can handle and still adequately protect human health, as well as comply with current and future drinking water regulations, is 1.2 milligrams per liter (mg/l), as nitrogen.
She indicated that she would expect any proposal from SATET to include the long-term remediation of the Saginaw aquifer in addition to the short- term capacity issue and the effect of ammonia on the Dye Plant and its distribution system.
SATET conducted a technical study of the Dye Water conditioning plant in order to determine how much influent ammonia, as nitrogen, the Dye Water conditioning plant could handle and still maintain adequate protection of human health and comply with current and future drinking water regulations.
vls.law.vill.edu /locator/3d/Aug2001/995662.txt   (5951 words)

  
 Without, Chapter 27
Satet shook Her gazelle’s head in dismay… Sehkmet was always full of devious plans, but She’d also been fooled into thinking that beer stained red with pomegranate juice was blood.
Satet gave a high-pitched giggle and her legs altered to gazelle’s hindquarters; she sprang away with a laugh and came down on the other side of the portal.
Furious, Satet jerked free the dagger and flung it at him; he dodged it neatly and instead plucked it from the air, slashing at her.
cinnamongrrl.popullus.net /files/without27.htm   (3117 words)

  
 Satet
Satet is the Egyptian goddesss of inundation (the yearly flooding of the Nile) and fertility.
She was also connected to the star "Sept." The beginning of the flood season was when the star returned to the night sky.
Satet was the pricipal female counterpart of Khnemu.
www.pantheon.org /articles/s/satet.html   (113 words)

  
 Ancient Egypt: the Mythology - the Triad of Elephantine
Rounding out the triad of Elephantine was Khnemu's consort, Satet and their daughter, Anqet.
Satet, as the "Mistress of Elephantine", was associated with the annual flooding of the Nile.
Anqet was the divine child of Satet and Khnemu and was seen as the guardian of Egypt's southern frontier and the Nile cataracts.
www.egyptianmyths.net /elephant.htm   (227 words)

  
 Satet, Archer-Goddess of the Inundation and the Nile Cataracts...
Satet, Archer-Goddess of the Inundation and the Nile Cataracts...
Satet (Setet, Sathit, Satit, Sati, Setis, Satis) was the archer-goddess of the Nile cataracts, her name linking her to Setet Island (Sehel Island) and the area around it.
She was also a fertility goddess, due to her aspect as a water goddess and a goddess of the inundation, and a goddess who purified the dead with her water.
www.thekeep.org /~kunoichi/kunoichi/themestream/satet.html   (899 words)

  
 HERMITAGE MUSEUM ONLINE SHOP: Goddess Satet
A reproduction of an Egyptian bronze sculpture of goddess Satet (7th-6th century BC).
Satet, the goddess of Sekgel Island, was thought to be a daughter of Ra, god of the Sun.
An elegant Satet statuette will bring warmth of the sunto your home and protect you from the tricks of fortune.
www.hermitagemuseum.org /shop/html_En/products/00215_Goddess_Satet.html   (112 words)

  
 REALM OF THE GODS
(goddess) - Satet was the guardian of Egypt`s southern border and was associated with the Elephantine island at Aswan.
Satet was believed to be the wife of the creator-god Khnum from the New Kingdom and afterwards and the mother of Anuket, the huntress.
Satet was also mentioned in the "Pyramid Texts" where she is believed to be responsible for purifying the dead.
gtae.users.btopenworld.com /godsS.htm   (1744 words)

  
 Anuket   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
In later times she was identified with Nephthys at the temple "Per-Mer" due to Satet's links with the goddess Isis and Khnum's link with Osiris.
However both Satet and Anuket are closely linked to Isis, who took on the attributes of the fertile waters of the Nile as well as being a form of the star Sirius.
Anuket was generally depicted as a woman wearing a tall headdress made either of reeds or of ostrich feathers, often holding a sceptre and the ankh symbol, but was occasionally shown in the form of a gazelle.
www.ancientegyptonline.co.uk /anuket.html   (371 words)

  
 digNubia
Satet and Anuket were the two wives of the ram-headed god Khnum.
In southern Nubia, Khnum merged with the ram-headed Amun, so Anuket and Satet in some places also appear as wives of Amun.
Anuket and Satet were both called the Eye of Re.
www.dignubia.org /bookshelf/goddesses.php?god_id=00037   (77 words)

  
 Satet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet (also known as Setet, Sathit, Satit, Sati, Setis or Satis) was an archer-goddess of the Nile cataracts.
As a warrior goddess, she protected the pharaoh and the southern borders of ancient Egypt and in her role as a goddess of fertility she caused the innundation and purified the deceased with water from the underworld (the mythical source of the Nile).
As a result, she (like Isis) was linked to Sothis, the personification of the star Sept (Sirius A, the ‘Dog Star’) which rose in the sky just before the arrival of the inundation every year.
www.ancientegyptonline.co.uk /satet.html   (448 words)

  
 Satet - The Goddess of the Annual Flood of the Nile   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet would catch it with a jar and pour it into the Nile to create the annual flood.
She was shown with the Hedjet, the White Crown of Upper Egypt and antelope horns.
Close-up of a relief of Satet in the Satet/Khnoum Temple on Elephantine Island.
gei.aerobatics.ws /egypt_satet.html   (160 words)

  
 [No title]
Statistical analysis The primary aims of this study were to detect enterovirus sequences in muscle from CFS patients and determine the specificity of the observation by comparison with tissue controls (from non-CFS cases); and to examine the relation between abnormal lactate responses to exercise and the presence of enterovirus RNA in muscle.
The number of instances in which enterovirus RNA was detected in CFS cases compared with the tissue controls, and the proportions of enterovirus positive CFS cases among the SATET+ and SATET- CFS cases (the comparison groups), were compared using Fisher's exact probability test.
RESULTS SATET findings Twenty eight of the 48 CFS patients (58.3%) were SATET+, having venous plasma lactate levels exceeding the control upper 99% confidence intervals25 at two or more time points.
www.cfids-cab.org /cfs-inform/Virus/lane.etal03.txt   (2645 words)

  
 Satet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet was the consort and counterpart of Khnemu, and was worshipped with him at Elephantine.
Satet was the Goddess of the inundation (the yearly flooding of the Nile).
She was also connected to the star "Sept".
www.janih.com /kitiana/egyptian/satet.html   (87 words)

  
 Egyptian gods: Satet, Setet, Sathit, Satit, Sati, Setis, Satis   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet, was a fertility goddess from the first cataract at Aswan (from Setet Island) where she poured out all the water over Egypt every year when the star Sirius (Dog star) was visible for the fist time over the horizon.
She was also patroness of hunting with the white crown with gazelle horns plus carrying a bow and arrows.
She washed the bodies of the dead to purify them before entering the afterlife.
nemo.nu /ibisportal/0egyptintro/1egypt/gudasidor/satet.htm   (125 words)

  
 Heterogeneity in chronic fatigue syndrome: evidence from magnetic resonance spectroscopy of muscle.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
This cannot be explained satisfactorily by the effects of 'inactivity' or 'deconditioning', and patients with abnormal lactate responses to exercise (SATET +ve) have been found to have significantly fewer Type 1 muscle fibres in quadriceps biopsies than SATET -ve patients.
We performed phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy on forearm muscles of 10 SATET +ve patients, 9 SATET -ve patients and 13 sedentary volunteers.
These observations support other evidence which indicates that chronic fatigue syndrome is a heterogeneous disorder, and confirms the view that some chronic fatigue syndrome patients have a peripheral component to their fatigue.
www.ncf-net.org /library/exercise-2000.htm   (189 words)

  
 Kemet.org Names of Netjer : Satet
Satet (G/R Satis) - "She Who Shoots (Arrows)" Consort to Khnum of Abu (and sometimes of Montu at Uaset), Satet is protectress of Kemet's southern border, felling the enemies of the Two Lands with Her bow.
She is depicted as a woman wearing the Hedjet (White Crown) of Upper Kemet decorated with either ostrich plumes (called an atef crown, like one commonly worn by Wesir), or more often, gazelle or antelope horns.
Satet protected the source of the Nile and was said to purify the ruler with jars of its sacred waters.
www.kemet.org /glossary/satet.html   (147 words)

  
 Temple of Satet
On the island Elephantine a temple was erected dedicated to the triade of the cataract region, Khnum, Satet (Satis), and Anuket (Anukis).
The following photo (left) shows the entrance of the temple, the floor plan is shown on the right side.
The left (southern) door in the hall leads through a corridoor to the anteroom D, and from there into the sanctuary of Satet (E).
www.maat-ka-ra.de /english/bauwerke/satettempel/satettempel.htm   (359 words)

  
 Satet Temple, Elephantine Island
The ruins include a variety of buildings located on the south end of Elephantine Island across from the modern city of Aswan.
More than 500 blocks of the Satet Temple commissioned by Queen Hatshepsut have been recovered and reassembled, the reassembly made possible in part because the blocks had portions of reliefs engraved on them, thus providing a kind of huge jigsaw puzzle.
(See image on right; Satet wearing the crown with antelope horns is on the left side of that image.) Other deities include Amun and the ram god Khnum, depicted on the left in the left-hand image.
www.bluffton.edu /~sullivanm/egypt/aswan/satet.html   (443 words)

  
 Map Of Satet In India - Maps   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Island with the Kiosk of Khnum and the Temple of Satet.
Its local deities were Hapy and Satet, god of the Nile flood and...
satet satevo sathers sathorn sathya sati satiated satic satie
www.wvfifteen.com /maps/map-of-satet-in-india.php   (350 words)

  
 Chnum-Satet-Anuket - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article has been tagged since July 2006.
The Chnum-Satet-Anuket triad of Elephantine was the early group of egyptian mythology that focused on the tree gods, Chnum (god of the source of the nile river), Satet (The personofication of the floods of the nile river), and Anuket (the Goddess of the nile river.
Chnum soon arose to become the chief god of this triad.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Chnum-Satet-Anuket   (126 words)

  
 Satet/Khnoum Temple on Elephantine Island   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
It was dedicated to Satet and her husband Khnoum.
Faces are usually shown in side view, this was one of the few examples where a face is shown in front view.
Relief of the Goddess Satet (left) and the God Khnoum (right), her husband.
gei.aerobatics.ws /egypt_elephantine_temple.html   (263 words)

  
 Muscle fibre characteristics and lactate responses to exercise in chronic fatigue syndrome -- Lane et al. 64 (3): 362 ...
This 44 year old man was investigated three years after developing chronic fatigue syndrome, characterised by prominent myalgia after a flu-like illness.
His serum creatine kinase was mildly increased at 304 (normal<150) IU/l and SATET was abnormal.(haematoxylin and eosin originally×400).
An abnormal SATET was defined as one in which lactate responses
jnnp.bmjjournals.com /cgi/content/full/64/3/362   (3362 words)

  
 SATET EXPO 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Under the banner “It’s Time To Deliver”, the SATET Expo Series began breathing life into its Mission Statement of “Creating a meaningful platform for Tourism Education and Training Institutions to showcase their initiatives, while providing lecturers, educators and students experience, knowledge and the means to understanding of our Tourism Industry in its totality”.
Concerted, ongoing efforts are under way to garner national status for The SATET Expo Series: all other Provincial Tourism Authorities have been approached, along with National and Provincial Departments of Education and Culture.
Maintaining the impetus of previous years, our roll-call of sponsors proud to be associated with The SATET Expo Series delivers added credence to these ‘conventions of excellence’.
www.kzn.org.za /kzn/news/186.xml   (755 words)

  
 The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map: Temple of Satet Ancient Temple   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Satet was believed to pour water out of jars into the Nile to cause the yearly inundations.
She is usualy represented as a woman wearing a star on her head and carrying water jars.
The Louvre has numerous fragments from the temple destroyed in the 19th Century by Mohamed Ali.
www.megalithic.co.uk /article.php?sid=6336026   (634 words)

  
 Sati or Satet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
In the preface to the cxxvth Chapter of the Book of the Dead the deceased enumerates the various sacred places which he has visited, and says, "I have been in the waters of the stream, and I "have made offerings of incense.
I have guided myself to the "Shentet Tree of the {divine} children, and I have been in Abu "{Elephantine}in the Temple of Satet,.
This is the only mention of Sati, or Setet, in the Theban Recension of the book of the Dead, but it is of great importance as showing that the temple of the goddess at Abu was regarded as one of the principal holy places in Egypt.
www.touregypt.net /satet.htm   (271 words)

  
 Abnormal Muscle Energy Metabolism May Be Associated With Enterovirus Infection in Some Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Patients
Of the 48 CFS patients, 28 (58.3%) were SATET+, with venous plasma lactate levels exceeding the control upper 99% confidence intervals at two or more time points and the remaining patients had normal responses (SATET-).
Biopsy samples from 10 of the 48 CFS patients were positive for enterovirus (20.8%), and 9 of the 10 cases were among the 28 SATET+ patients (32.1%).
Only 1 (5%) of the 20 SATET- patient biopsies was enterovirus positive.
www.chronicfatiguesyndromesupport.com /library/showarticle.cfm/id/5188   (518 words)

  
 Temple of Satet, Aswan
A few paces west of the Nilometer, surrounded by brick walls, are the substructures of a small Temple of Satet, built over an earlier temple and incorporating a variety of architectural fragments (column drums, blocks bearing the name of Tuthmosis III, Ramesses III, etc.).
The inscriptions on the solitary stump of column still standing refer to Trajan as the builder, but there was a temple on this site as early as c.
Unauthorized duplication in part or whole without prior written consent prohibited by law.
www.planetware.com /aswan/temple-of-satet-egy-asw-temsat.htm   (122 words)

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