In Ancient Egyptian texts,
Two Ladies is a
religious
euphemism for
Wadjet and
Nekhbet, the
deities who were the
patrons of the
Ancient Egyptians and worshiped by all
after the unification of its two parts,
Lower Egypt, and
Upper
Egypt. When the two parts of Egypt were joined together, there
was no merger of these deities as often occurred with similar
deities from various regions and cities. Both goddesses were
retained because of the importance of their roles and they became
known as the
two ladies, who were the protectors of
unified
Egypt.
After the unification, the image of Nekhbet joined Wadjet on the
uraeus, thereafter, they were shown together
as part of the crowns of Egypt. An example of one is shown in the
photograph to the right. The two ladies were responsible for
establishing the
laws, protecting the
rulers and the Egyptian
country, and promoting
peace.
The holiest of deities in the
Egyptian
pantheon usually were referred to by such euphemisms or other
euphemistic titles—sometimes in great chains of titles—in order to
keep their names secret from enemies and disbelievers and, to show
respect for their powers.
An example of the use of this term in text references may be found
in the following commemoration of a military campaign under pharaoh
Amenhotep III recorded on three
stelas carved from rock. In the text he is
referred to as Nebmaatra.
They are from his fifth year and were found
near Aswan
and Sai
Island
in Nubia. The official
account of his military victory emphasizes his martial prowess with
the typical
hyperbole used by all
pharaohs, but notes that the Two Ladies appeared to him to provide
advice and a warning about the leader of the
Kush army.
Regnal Year 5, third month of Inundation, day 2.
...appearing in truth, [the] Two Ladies, Who
[establish] laws and [pacify] the Two
Lands...
[to the] King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebmaatra, heir
of Ra, Son of Ra, [Amenhotep, ruler of Thebes]...
came to tell [the pharaoh], "The fallen one of
vile Kush has plotted rebellion in his
heart."
[The pharaoh] led on to victory; he completed it in his
first campaign of victory.
[The pharaoh] reached them like the wing stroke of a
falcon...
Ikheny, the boaster in the midst of the army, did not
know the lion that was before him.
Nebmaatra was the fierce-eyed lion whose claws seized
vile Kush, who trampled down all its
chiefs in their valleys, they being cast down in their blood, one
on top of the other
The references about fierce-eyed lions is another euphemism,
related to the war deity,
Sekhmet, the
fierce
warrior goddess of Egypt who
protected the pharaoh in battle, conquered his enemies, and brought
victory. She was depicted as a
lioness and
the pharaoh-as-warrior was said to be her son, therefore, a lion.
Bast was her counterpart in one of
the two lands, but after unification, Sekhmet remained as the
fierce warrior and Bast was assigned other duties in the
Egyptian pantheon.
These three deities were the strongest patrons of Ancient Egypt.
They never were displaced by deities who rose and declined in
importance to the Egyptians when the pharaohs chose a special
personal patron, a temple became extremely powerful, or the
capitals changed. The use of the image of the patron goddesses on
the uraeus was retained even during the rule of
Akhenaten, who suppressed the worship of all
deities except his own personally chosen favorite,
Aten. His Hebty, or
Nebty name was
derived from a root with the two ladies as well, as seen in the
hierographic image of Akhenaten's Hebty name,
Wernesytemakhetaten, displayed in the information box at
his
article and should be translated
as,
He of the Two Ladies, Great of kingship in Akhetaten.
In this way he differed from no other pharaoh and the importance of
these traditional deities persisted subtly throughout his reign,
when he tried to break the power of the temple of Amun. As soon as
his reign ended, the ancient religious traditions were restored
fully and even, later embraced by the subsequent foreign rulers of
Egypt until the collapse of the
Roman
Empire.
On the central portion of the
Menat necklace
displayed above, the
two ladies flank a statue of Sekhmet,
who is being propitiated by the pharaoh in a temple ceremony. The
placement of them alongside her in the temple of the lioness
goddess, demonstrates the authority with which she always was
associated, and the importance of an association with the two
ladies.
Nebty name
G16The
nebty name, literally meaning, "two ladies", is one
of the titles of an Egyptian pharaoh, following the standard naming
convention used by the Ancient Egyptians. The name was associated
with the patron goddesses of Upper and Lower Egypt:
- * Nekhbet, patron deity of Upper Egypt, was represented by as
an Egyptian vulture, and
- * Wadjet, patron deity of Lower Egypt, was represented as an
Egyptian cobra.
The first time the nebty name is used
definitively,
[606506] is approximately
2950 BC by the
First Dynasty pharaoh,
Semerkhet, although the name only became a fully
independent title by the
Twelfth Dynasty which began in 1991
BC.
Typically, this name is not framed by a
cartouche or
serekh, but
always begins with the
hieroglyphs of a
vulture and a cobra, each resting upon a
basket, symbolizing the
dual noun "nebty". The rest of the
title varies with each pharaoh, and would have been read,
[s/he] of the Two Ladies, followed by the meaning
of the rest of the title. Translation of the nebty name for a
pharaoh often is abbreviated, omitting the phrase above that begins
each nebty name, making full understanding of the title
difficult.
Anthropomorphic Ptolemaic representation
In the relief to the right the two goddesses are shown crowning a
Ptolemaic pharaoh with the double crown derived from the
combination of their separate crowns. The Two Ladies are
represented as women, in the same way as some other Ancient
Egyptian goddesses.
This relief is on the Temple of Horus
at Edfu
. It
is a temple that was built on top of the ruins of an early temple
during the
Ptolemaic Dynasty
between 237 BC to 57 BC—into the reign of
Cleopatra VII, who was the last ruling pharaoh
before Egypt was absorbed into the Roman Empire.
The headdresses of the goddesses in the relief display imagery that
is inconsistent with early traditions in that the vulture would not
have related to both.
These Greek rulers embraced the Ancient Egyptian traditions, albeit
with their own differing interpretations and styles and, at times
introducing concepts that the Ancient Egyptians would not have
represented, that were based upon parallels made to their Greek
traditions and concepts. Greek and Roman religious beliefs were
significantly less
zoomorphic than
Ancient Egyptians. In
indigenous
Egyptian traditions, these goddesses might have been portrayed as
women with the heads of the respective animals more typically
representing the deities.
Notes
- Toby A. H. Wilkinson, Early Dynastic Egypt, Routledge
1999, p. 292
- Urk. IV 1665-66
References
External links