In ancient Egyptian mythology, the goddess Bastet (or Baset) was often associated with home, fertility, and domesticity. She was frequently depicted as a lioness or a woman with the head of a lioness or domestic cat. Bastet was considered the daughter of the sun god Ra, and while she wasn't specifically "married" in the same way gods were in other mythologies, she was sometimes linked to the god Ptah, the creator god and patron of craftsmen. Their relationship symbolized the balance between the nurturing aspects of Bastet and the creative powers of Ptah.
Yes they did
An ancient Egyptian harpist
Ancient Egyptian
There is no ancient Egyptian god Zyopt.
how did ancient Egyptian life differ from ours
Not in Egyptian myth.
no one
ktm
Yes they did
Bastet was married to Ptah and had a son. --Some say she was married to Ra though.
His wife was Mut, an ancient Egyptian Mother Goddess.
The ancient Egyptian deity that was considered the hidden one, a local creator deity later married to Mut is Amun.
Most Egyptologists refer to her as Bastet. Her name is also spelled Bast, Baset, and Ubasti (approximating the original Egyptian pronunciation).
The ancient Egyptian goddess Bast was consort to Ptah.There is no goddess called Basset.
An ancient Egyptian harpist
ancient Egyptian cat goddess. At first a goddess of the home, she later became known as a goddess of war. The center of her cult was at Bubastis. Her name also appears as Ubast. Bast, also spelt Bastet, Baast, Ubasti and Baset, was an ancient Egyptian goddess and was often thought of as a protector of the pharaoh. In some later myths she was regarded as the protector of Ra, the ancient Egyptian sun god, as well. She was depicted in some myths and statues to be a lioness-goddess and in others a domestic cat-goddess. As Egyptian mythology progressed she was almost unanimously regarded as the latter. Bast's perception changed quite a bit throughout the centuries so it is hard to find a set of facts about Bast that everybody agrees on.
Ancient Egyptian