In Ancient Egyptain myth, the god Khnum did not die.
The ancient Egyptian god Knum did not die.
Khnum formed a triad with the goddesses Anuket and Satis; Khenmu was the creator of people. He sculpted them out of clay from the Nile, held them up so that Ra could shine his life-giving rays upon them, and then placed them in the womb. His wife was the lioness-goddess Menhit, and their son was Hike.
Anubis was born a ancinet Egyptian god and thus never died.
The Egyptian sun god is Ra.
Anubis was not the Egyptian god of sleep, it was Auf.
Khnum is the ancient Egyptian deity considered as the creator deity and god of the inundation.
The name of the Egyptian's ram-headed god is Khnum.
The full name of the Egyptian pharaoh Khufu (also known as Cheops) was Khnum-Khufu, which means "protected by the god Khnum". Khnum was the ram-headed god of the Nile and pottery.
The ancient Egyptian deity that was considered the deity god of the inundation is Khnum.
In Ancient Egyptian religion, the ram was the symbol of several gods: Khnum, Heryshaf and Amun (in his incarnation as a god of fertility).
Green was, and still is, a color symbolizing fertility and vegatation; two things Khnum was assocated with as the god which moulded the bodies of children and animals and who was god of the Nile's flooding.
Khnum was an Egyptian deity. There weren't direct analogs for most of the Egyptian pantheon into the Greco-Roman pantheon.
Heqet was married to the god Khnum. That made sense to the Egyptians since Heqet was the goddess of human and Nile fertility and childbirth, and Khnum was the god of the source of the Nile and the 'creator of babies'. Khnum was however also sometimes romantically connected to the goddess Satet, yet another Nile deity.
Khnum was a ram headed god of the creation of people and animals.
Khnum (hieroglyphs Xnmw) was a ram-headed creator god sometimes shown creating men on his potter's wheel, also part of the trinity Khnum/Satis/Anukis worshipped at Elephantine. Khnum was also worshipped at Esna and Herwer near modern el-Ashmunein.
kəˈnu; m
Khnum-Khufwy which means Khnum {who was a god} protect me.