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Ogdoad (Egyptian)
Group of 8 deities in Ancient Egyptian religion
This article is about the deities in Egyptian mythology. For the concept in Gnosticism, see Ogdoad (Gnosticism).
A depiction of the Ogdoad based off a Roman era relief at the Hathor temple in Dendera in which some have frog heads and others have serpent headsThe Ogdoad with both their male and female consortsDrawing of a representation of the Ogdoad in the temple of Philae[1]
Texts of the Late Period describe them as having the heads of frogs (male) and serpents (female), and they are often depicted in this way in reliefs of the last dynasty, the Ptolemaic Kingdom.[3]
^"Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from a photograph by Béato. C.f. Lepsius, Denkm, iv.pl.66 c.", published in Maspero (1897).
The scene is collapsed from "the two extremities of a great scene at Philae, in which the Eight, divided into two groups of four, take part in the adoration of the king."
^Zivie-Koch, Christiane (2016). "L'Ogdoad d'Hermopolis à Thebes et ailleurs ou l'invention d'un mythe". Egitto e Vicino Oriente. 39: 57–90.
^Smith, Mark (2002), On the Primaeval Ocean, p. 38