As far as I know, no single Temple of Seshat has been officially found. Seshat shared a Temple at Heliopolis I believe. Also, I heard Tahuti (Thoth) Preisthood subsumed Seshat's so it could be that any temple dedicated to Seshat were re-dedicated to Tahuti. But since, She is the Goddess of Libraries She may been worshipped in Library. In Egyptian times, writing and the written word were considered sacred. That would be my guess...
She was born from Nut and Geb, but I don't know when.
57 children
he made so many children that it is impossible to count
4000 children
seshat is an Egyptian goddess
Seshat, the ancient Egyptian goddess of wisdom, knowledge, and writing, is not typically depicted as having children in mythology. She is often associated with Thoth, the god of wisdom, but their relationship is more symbolic than familial. In Egyptian mythology, Seshat is primarily focused on her roles rather than motherhood. Therefore, there are no records or stories that suggest Seshat had any kids.
The consort of Seshat was believed to be Thoth.
seshat
As far as I know, no single Temple of Seshat has been officially found. Seshat shared a Temple at Heliopolis I believe. Also, I heard Tahuti (Thoth) Preisthood subsumed Seshat's so it could be that any temple dedicated to Seshat were re-dedicated to Tahuti. But since, She is the Goddess of Libraries She may been worshipped in Library. In Egyptian times, writing and the written word were considered sacred. That would be my guess...
As far as I know, no single Temple of Seshat has been officially found. Seshat shared a Temple at Heliopolis I believe. Also, I heard Tahuti (Thoth) Preisthood subsumed Seshat's so it could be that any temple dedicated to Seshat were re-dedicated to Tahuti. But since, She is the Goddess of Libraries She may been worshipped in Library. In Egyptian times, writing and the written word were considered sacred. That would be my guess...
Seshat.
Egyptian myth does not say.
Yes; both Seshat and Ma'at were regarded as wives of Thoth, but Seshat was also regarded as his daughter.
She was born from Nut and Geb, but I don't know when.
Seshat was the ancient Egyptian goddess of writing, historical records, accounting and mathematics, measurement and architecture to the ancient Egyptians.
Thoth had two goddesses which he was associated with as "wives", Ma'at and Seshat.