the sun god "re" or the other god kuhmn some sites say re and others say kuhmn
The role of Anuket is described as being the water goddess of the Nile cataracts and the fields.
The name of Egyptian's goddess of river Nile is Anuket.
Anuket, the ancient Egyptian goddess associated with the Nile and fertility, does not have a specific date of birth as she is a mythological figure. Her worship began during the Old Kingdom period of Ancient Egypt, around 2686-2181 BCE, and she became more prominent in later periods. Anuket was often depicted as a woman with a headdress featuring feathers or a reed, symbolizing her connection to the Nile and its life-giving properties.
Anuket was an ancient Egyptian goddess associated with the Nile River and its life-giving waters. She was often depicted as a woman with a crown of reeds or as a gazelle, symbolizing fertility and abundance. Anuket was believed to control the flooding of the Nile, which was crucial for agriculture, and she was also linked to concepts of nourishment and protection, particularly for those living along the riverbanks. Her worship emphasized the importance of the Nile in sustaining life and promoting prosperity in ancient Egyptian society.
In the Greek beliefs, it was Nilus. In the Egyptian belief system, is was Anuket, who was a Goddess.
According to my research, Anuket is the goddess you are searching for.
Two goddesses associated with the Nile (Satis and Anuket) were represented as ibexes or antelopes, so the ibex was symbolic of strength and grace on the waters.
The Nile River fits your description. It was so important to the Ancient Egyptians that it became a part of their Religious beliefs. They called the Goddess of the Nile, Anuket.
The ancient Egyptian deity that was considered the goddess of the Nile River, the child of Satis, and among the Elephantine triad of deities is Anuket.
The practice is known as exporting. Exporting involves selling surplus resources or goods to other countries to generate income and balance the demand and supply dynamics in the domestic market.
There are many Nile deites of ancient Egypt; Goddesses Anuket (personification and goddess of the Nile, fertility and war godddess of Nubian origin, of Satet-Khnum-Anuket triad on Elephantine island ) Naunet (chaos and water, consort of Nun) Satet (the inundation of the Nile, Sirius star; the tear of Isis caught by Satet's jugs and put into Nile waters, of Satet-Khnum-Anuket triad on Elephantine island) Neith (sometimes a primal water goddess, mother of Apep, Ra, and Sobek) Mut (primal mother goddess of the waters, consort Amun, child is Khnum) Hatmehit (meaning "great flood", identifed with fish and Hathor; and Isis for her consort Banebdjedet ) Isis (the flooding of the Nile caused by the tears for Osiris) Gods: Nun (primeval god of water and chaos.) Hapi (annual flooding of Nile god - the inundation event, fertility.) Heryshaf (ram headed, creator god, emerged from Nun i.e. primeval waters; "ruler of the riverbanks") Yam (sea god, Ugarit deity) Khnum (ram headed, "the great potter", from the clay of the flood he created people and held them aloft so Ra could give them life and put them in the womb; god guardian of the source of the Nile of Satet-Khnum-Anuket triad on Elephantine island near Aswan) Banebdjedet (Hamehit's consort, identfed with Osiris, ram) Osiris ( granted all life, including sprouting vegetation and the fertile flooding of the Nile River)
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.