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Horus (Egyptian Mythology)

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Horus

Birthdate:
Death:
Place of Burial: Egypt
Immediate Family:

Son of Osiris and Isis
Husband of Seth and Hathor (Egyptian Mythology)
Father of Thoth

Occupation: Protodynastic pharaoh of ancient Egypt, The ancient Egyptians national patron god
Managed by: Anne Brannen
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Horus (Egyptian Mythology)

Scorpion I was the first of two kings so-named of Upper Egypt during the Protodynastic Period. His name may refer to the scorpion goddess Serket.

He is believed to have lived in Thinis one or two centuries before the rule of the better known King Scorpion of Nekhen and is presumably the first true king of upper egypt. To him belongs the U-j tomb found in the royal cemetery of Abydos where Thinite kings were buried. That tomb was plundered in antiquity, but in it were found many small ivory plaques, each with a hole for tying it to something, and each marked with one or more hieroglyph-type scratched images which are thought to be names of towns, perhaps to tie to offerings and tributes to keep track of which came from which town. Two of those plaques seem to name the Delta towns Baset and Buto, showing that Scorpion's armies had penetrated the Nile Delta. It may be that the conquests of Scorpion started the Egyptian hieroglyphic system by starting a need to keep records and information in writing.

Recently a 5,000-year-old graffito has been discovered by Professor John Darnell of Yale University that also bears the symbols of Scorpion and depicts his victory over another protodynastic ruler (possibly Naqada's king). The defeated king or place named in the graffito was Bull's Head, a marking also found in U-j.

It is perhaps noteworthy that between c. 2900 BC and c. 2700 BC, Zuqaqip, whose name also means "Scorpion", is supposed to have reigned over the Sumerian city of Kish.