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Difference between revisions of "Question: Who is this Egyptian god "Min"?"
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Revision as of 22:29, 28 October 2014
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Question: Who is this Egyptian god "Min"?
Although it is true that one of Min's attributes was that of a fertility god, or a god of procreation, he had other traits that are analogous to the attributes of both the Northwest Semitic deities of El and Baal
Hugh Nibley treated Min in his magnum opus One Eternal Round, pp. 304-322. Although it is true that one of Min's attributes was that of a fertility god, or a god of procreation, he had other traits that are analogous to the attributes of both the Northwest Semitic deities of El and Baal. For one, he is often portrayed as a man sitting on a throne. Second, he is a god of Creation, the Father, Most High God, etc., as El is depicted in the Ugaritic texts, and later in the Hebrew Bible. He is also a harvest-vegetation god, and, like Baal, oversees the assurance of the renewal of animal and vegetation life through rains and floods, etc. To draw attention to only the fertility aspect of Min is a very myopic view. What's more, John Gee, in a very important article [1], has pointed out that the figure of Min is often simply called "the great god" by the Egyptians themselves.
Notes
- ↑ John Gee, “Towards an Interpretation of Hyppocephali,” 334