There are two Egyptian dieties named Hapi (Hapi). The god of the Nile could be depicted with a crocodile head (not to be confused with Ammit) or a baboon head.
Hapi was the name of the Nile river god. He was associated with fertility of crops and the holding together of upper and lower Egypt.
Hathor, an ancient Egyptian goddess, was believed to have several children including Ihy, Imsety, Duamutef, and Hapi. These children were associated with different aspects of life and were often depicted as human or animal-headed figures.
Hapi was pictured as a black bull
Egyptian myth does not say how Hapi came to be.
No parents of Hapi are known.
Hapi its pronounced Happy but spelled Hapi
The duration of Everybody Hapi is 3600.0 seconds.
Hapi and Imsety are two of the four sons of Horus in ancient Egyptian mythology, each associated with different aspects of protection and the afterlife. Hapi is often depicted as a god of the annual flooding of the Nile and is associated with fertility and abundance. Imsety, on the other hand, is typically represented as a human-headed figure and serves as the protector of the liver in the embalming process, safeguarding the deceased's vital organs. Together with Duamutef and Qebehsenuef, they were believed to watch over the mummified remains of the deceased.
Everybody Hapi ended on 2010-09-04.
Everybody Hapi was created on 2008-11-23.
Hapi was an Ancient Egyptian god. He was the god of the Nile river and he was sent to the underworld