a blog for me to ramble about the âPantheonâ universe, where Bronze Age deities struggle to make their mark and survive in a multicultural divine world. | a synthesis of Egyptian, Amorite, Hurrian, Mesopotamian, and Anatolian mythology and history | Current Projects: Papyrus Nabayat - The Baal Cycle - The Battle of Kadesh |
Pantheon is a series of mythological stories that take place from approximately 3000 BCE to 1200 BCE in the area known in modern times as SWANA (Southwest Asia and North Africa).
The stories assume the existence of each ancient cultureâs deities while taking into account the historical conflicts between those cultures, resulting in a kind of âhistorical mythologyâ where historical conflict reflects upon the divine realm (E.G.: the Egyptian pantheon fighting the Hittite pantheon and allies in the Battle of Kadesh story).
What tags organize this blog?
Find Pantheon artwork: #iconography
Find Pantheon written work: #textcorpus
Find Pantheon lore (short posts): #lore
Find Papyrus Nabayat content: #papyrusnabayat
Find Baal Cycle content: #baalcycle
Find Battle of Kadesh content: #battleofkadesh
Individual mythology groups have their own tags below, as do some of the gods. Not all gods can be linked below for space reasons, but they are tagged.
Which gods have a prominent place in Pantheon?
Tags below the cut!
Syrian and Amorite Deities - #amorite mythology
Baal, Ugaritic god of storms #baal
Yam, Ugaritic god of the sea #yam
Mot, Ugaritic god of death #mot
Anat, Ugaritic goddess of war #anat
Astarte, Ugaritic goddess of hunting #astarte
Horon, Ugaritic god of exorcism #horon
Resheph, Ugaritic god of war, plague, and healing #resheph
Kothar, Ugaritic god of crafting #kothar
Khasis, Ugaritic goddess of crafting and war #khasis
Gupan, Ugaritic god of vineyards #gupan
Ugar, Ugaritic god of fields #ugar
Egyptian Deities - #egyptian mythology
Sutekh, god of storms, deserts, chaos, war #sutekh
Djehuty, god of knowledge, wisdom, scribes, the moon #djehuty
Hathor, goddess of love, sex, war, the sun, and music #hathor
Usire, god of the underworld and vegetation #usire
Aset, goddess of magic, wisdom, and motherhood #aset
Nebethut, goddess of darkness and mourning #nebethut
Ra, god of the afternoon sun #ra (also #khepri and #atum )
Khonsu, god of the moon, healing, and childhood #khonsu
Heru the Younger, god of kingship, the sun, and the moon #heru
Anpu, god of embalming the underworld #anpu
Ptah, god of crafting and creation #ptah
Sekhmet, goddess of war, plague, fire, healing #sekhmet
Nefertem, god of beauty and lotuses #nefertem
Sokar, god of the Memphite necropolis #sokar
Aten, god of the sun disc #aten
Hatti and Anatolian Deities - #anatolian mythology
Tarhunt, Nesian god of storms, war, and vineyards #tarhunt
Arinna, Hattic goddess of the sun #arinna
Telipinu, Hattic god of storms, fertility, and vegetation #telipinu
Nerik, Hattic god of storms and war #nerik
Ziplantil, Hattic god of storms and the underworld #ziplantil
Inara, Hattic goddess of hunting #inara
Aruna, Luwian god of the sea #aruna
Hasameli, Hattic god of crafting #hasameli
Taru, Hattic-Kaskian god of storms #taru
Zilipuri, Hattic-Kaskian god of crafting #zilipuri
Iluyanka, Hattic-Kaskian god of the Black Sea #iluyanka
Arma, Nesian god of the moon #arma
Kasku, Hattic god of the moon #kasku
Hurrian Deities - #hurrian mythology
TeĹĄĹĄub, god of storms #tessub
Sauska, goddess of war and sex #sauska
Tasmisu, god of war #tasmisu
Aranzah, god of the Tigris River #aranzah
Kumarbi, god of grain and the underworld #kumarbi
Hebat, goddess of queenship #hebat
Kiase, god of the sea #kiase
Sarruma, god of the mountains #sarruma
Simige, god of the sun #simige
Kusuh, god of the moon #kusuh
MukiĹĄanu, sukkal of Kumarbi #mukisanu
Impaluri, sukkal of Kiase, #impaluri
Umbu, Alalakhian god of the moon #umbu
Hedammu, god of the sea #hedammu
Sumerian and Babylonian Deities - #babylonian mythology
Enlil, god of storms and wind #enlil
Enki, god of the subterranean waters, crafting, wisdom #enki
IĹĄkur, god of storms #iskur
Marduk, tutelary god of Babylon #marduk
Nabu, god of scribes, knowledge, and wisdom #nabu
Nisaba, goddess of scribes and grain #nisaba
Ninurta, god of war and storms #ninurta
Sharur, divine mace of Ninurta #sharur
Inanna, goddess of war and sexuality #inanna
Nergal, god of war #nergal
Nanna, god of the moon #nanna
Utu, god of the sun #utu
EreĹĄkigal, goddess of the underworld #ereskigal
Assyrian Deities - #assyrian mythology
AĹĄĹĄur, tutelary god of the city AĹĄĹĄur #assur
Adad, Akkadian god of storms and war #adad
Erra, Akkadian god of war, pestilence, fire, and disorder #erra
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Kherty, god of the netherworld and ferryman of Duat
Very little is known about Kherty, primarily because heâs not the most social deity and would prefer to keep it that way. Kherty likes hiding hanging out deep in the watery depths of the netherworld where he canât be bothered. As a minor deity, this seems to be his best option for staying out of shenanigans, but alas, it does seem the shenanigans manage to find himâtypically in the form of his brother Sokar making a stupid decision or another.
As a ferryman, his duties involve logistics and transport for the chthonic deitiesâ offerings â after all, those offerings donât just teleport to the tables of their gods, someone has to go collect them and bring them to the estates of the chthonic deities. Kherty prefers not transporting any beings and would rather work with supplies only (maybe because objects donât gossip or cause drama), but when a lot of deceased come through Duat, sometimes he doesnât have much of a choice.
Though a timid deity, he does end up gaining some spine around the First Intermediate Period. Maybe Usire is just a bad influence - who knows - but Kherty seems engaged in eating hearts, cursing others, and being generally troublesome toward the deceased in the netherworld, enough that they beg Ra through prayer to save them from Kherty and Usire. Perhaps some topside propaganda against the netherworld deities? It wouldnât be the first time, and certainly wonât be the last.
Additional information about Kherty:
Both he and his elder brother Sokar are chthonic deities that were born underground in the realm of Duat. Despite this, both are nonetheless connected to the skies, though the connection for Kherty is more tenuous and related to his lineage than his divinity. While Sokar only wears a hawk headdress, Kherty has both a hawk and a ram to wear. The hawk headdresses are influenced by the ones that their father, Khenty-irty, used to wear.
Kherty also goes by the name of Khenty-irty (the younger), hence the hawk headdress that he doesnât wear. He still frequents his cult city, Khem, where heâs worshipped both under his own name (Kherty) and his fatherâs name (Khenty-irty) out of a desire to preserve his family legacy.
Kherty only transported offerings from the surface for Sokar, for obvious reasons (he doesnât like Anpu or Wepwawet given the contention between their families). When Usire became the Lord of the Dead, Kherty took a shine to him and started transporting his as well. Moving the offerings into Duat for two of the most famous chthonic deities keeps both him and his barque plenty busy.
Kherty is not married and considers himself too flighty to ever consider a long-term relationship. He also gets second hand embarrassment from Sokarâs crush behavior (particularly with Ptah) and would rather not act that way himself. He can practically guess he himself would be a lost cause.
Few deities have attained as a high a position with the mortals as Ra, and his ego matches his worship. Confident, elitist, and with a nasty temper, you can tell that all those violent eye-goddesses are definitely Raâs daughters. The rage and power of the sun is known to all, and his grip on control of Kemet ever since the 3rd Dynasty can be tyrannical to some, but Ra has been difficult to shake from his position. Well, until Amun came along, anyway.
Ra understands the value of both power and politics. As a result he has a habit of marrying his daughters (of which most of his children are daughters, given he has only two sons) to deities he wants to control or keep subjugated under his thumb. And that worked great up until he married Mut to Montu, to gain some control down in the area of Waset⌠until Mut decided sheâd rather date that hot Nubian god named Amun, and Raâs problems formally began.
He hates, hates, hates Amun. There is nothing Ra despises more than the fact that Amun gets the honorific position in their Amun-Ra synchronism. Kingship has always belonged to Ra and his carefully decided descendants, and when the Third Intermediate Period came along and the Priests of Amun decided they ought to be running the south instead of the pharaoh in the north, or that set of Nubian pharaohs empowered by Amun, well⌠suffice to say Ra is on the verge of an all-out war with Amun, a war that no one can afford to engage in with all the changes happening in the world around them. Whoâs going to defend Kemet against the Assyrians if Ra and Amun are busy in-fighting?
Some bonus information about him:
In search of power and immortality like the Sumerian gods, who did not have to deal with baâs and kaâs, Ra was cursed early in his life to reflect his three names - Khepri, Ra, and Atum (though these are technically the nicknames for each phase of his identity and not the names themselves). In simplified form: as the sun changes positions in the sky, he experiences a mortal life and is reborn at sunrise as Khepri, becomes strong and youthful again as Ra at high noon, then ages into an elderly form as Atum in the evening before becoming reborn again.
He was cursed by the snake god Rerek right before the First Intermediate Period, in which Ra started physically changing as he entered each phase. The story is a whole thing on its own that stretches back to Raâs jealousy over Rerekâs ability to revive his form directly as an ahk-spirit (or divine soul) without having to unite a ba and ka together. Ra could see that Rerekâs divinity was different and was immensely jealous over it. (Bonus lore: Rerek is the snake that stole the herb of immortality from GilgameĹĄ. You pull that kind of shit and you get kicked out of your homeland by Ninazu.)
Raâs aging isnât exactly like a mortalâs in its transition. At 6 AM, the sun rises and he is Khepri, who appears about 15 years old. He slowly ages at a rate of 2.5 years/hour until 12 PM, when he looks about 30 and becomes Ra. He ages at a rate of 2.5 years/hour again until heâs 45 at 6 PM, then continues aging at that same rate. At midnight, when he appears about 60, his rejuvenation triggers and he starts aging backwards at a rate of 7.5 years/hour then eventually reaches the age of Khepri at 6 AM and starts aging forward again at the slower rate.
This means that when Ra encounters Apep in the seventh hour of the night (1 AM) his rejuvenation has already triggered and heâs one hour into reversing his aging back into Ra (which takes, in this compressed time period, three hours). So heâs 52.5 years old, roughly, when he fights Apep as Atum. Because heâs not at his strongest (30-45) he struggles with fighting the serpent alone and needs assistance of other godsâthough Atum is still very strong, and by no means helpless.
Ra does have three names. Names are powerful and allow a degree of compelling against the being theyâre tied to, so deities keep their true names secret. Aset knows Raâs true name, but she doesnât know Atum or Khepriâs. This means that from 3 AM - 6 AM and 12 PM - 6 PM, Aset can compel Ra using his true name.
AĹĄĹĄur iconography can be a little elusive. Some depictions alongside Neo-Assyrian kings show what looks like to me like a winged mountain god with a bow and arrow.
I chose osprey details out of pure vibes. Ospreys are native to the area and it makes sense that, if heâs a bird, heâs probably a bird that enjoys high places (large cliff I mean mountain!) and enjoys a good fish out of the river beside his cliff. Osprey markings look nice, too.
Telipinu was well known for his ferocious temper. Frequently mortals had to engage in a mugawar to draw him back after heâd departed in a rage. Frankly, Telipinu just wanted to take a sullen nap; wouldnât anyone be angry if awoken with a bee sting?
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One of Djehutyâs most important tasks was protecting mortal scribes. He inspired them to learn and grow in their literacy and was often depicted sitting over them in his baboon form.
The ancient city of Naqada (Nubt, Nabayat, choose your vocalization) has always been his home. A place he could go where his most demonized actions would never follow. They know who their protector is and who it always has been.
If thereâs one goddess who feels like sheâs drawn the short stick in the bunch, itâs Nebet-hut. While sheâs undoubtedly part of a quartet of siblings that play some of the biggest roles in Kemetâs divine sphere, Nebet-hut is often left feeling like an afterthought tacked on to balance Sutekh. If he didnât exist, would she, when she was the last one born and everyone comes in balanced pairs?
Her relationship with her sister, Aset, has always been complicated. She loves her sister, but canât help but feel like everyoneâfrom their parents to their worshippersâconsider her like an extension of Aset. Aset is more important, more powerful, the queen. What is Nebet-hut but a shadow of her sister? How does a goddess make an identity for herself when sheâs always envisioned as a double to Aset? Nebet-hut is forever entangled in trying to figure out what she wants out of her existence, independent of what Aset or their brother Usire needs.
And then thereâs Sutekh. Good grief, she did not want to be married to him. Not only is Nebet-hut not attracted to him, but she resents the fact that yet another aspect of her independence and identity has been ripped from her. If sheâs not Asetâs Sister, then sheâs Sutekhâs Wife. Why canât she be herself? To make matters worse, Nebet-hut has figured out one thing she wants out of lifeâshe wants to be a motherâand Sutekh is infertile and cannot even give her that. It adds yet another layer of frustration and anger on top of everything else.
Nebet-hut already feels like goddesses play second sistrum to gods. She sees the pain and struggle that Aset goes through, trying to earn respect for her position as queen despite what feels like the world working against her. And Nebet-hut will always support her in that endeavor. But Aset doesnât seem to comprehend how truly invisible Nebet-hut is to the world when not linked to one of her siblings, and Nebet-hut honestly wishes she would.
Highlights of her life include:
- Nebet-hut has generally tried to play the role she was forced into without complaint, as she was socialized to do so, but when Sutekh couldnât make her a mother she took matters into her own hands. Nebet-hut, though she feels bad about stepping outside her marriage to try to conceive children, has figured out that no one is going to give her what she wants or needs out of life; only she can do that for herself.
- She has a strong relationship with her mother, Nut, stronger than Aset has, which is one of the few things Nebet-hut has over Aset. And itâs sad that she has to silently compete over something like that to boost her self-esteem, but it is what it is.
- In her efforts to achieve her own independence and shape her life independently of her siblings, she has actually found herself to be quite fond of Sokar. The two have a good affinity with each other. Her relationships with the Duat gods in general is far healthier than her other siblings, and she cares deeply for the deceased mortals that pass through Duat itself. It does seem that if ever there was a time that Kemet considered a Queen of the Underworld like Sumer has, she would be the best option. A Kemetic EreĹĄkigal, anyone? Maybe? Perhaps? It would be niceâŚ
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Hathor, goddess of love, sexuality, music, and the sun
Hathor is the middle child in Raâs brood of sun goddess daughters (and the twin to Sekhmet) and one of the famous wrathful Eye Goddesses, but from the way she behaves, youâd think she was the youngest. Hathor tends to flip between behaving very cutesy and speaking in a high-pitched voice and snarling at and threatening other deities, and because of her powerful nature, those threats are pretty potent. Sheâs independent, goal-oriented, and ruthless in her pursuit of what she wants. Nobody can get in the way of her desires, no matter who they might be.
She has long disliked the fact that her eldest sister, Tefnut, was the one who gained access to the queenship. Hathor has tried her best to weasel her way into power, but the fact that the royal couples tend to result from married twins has made her efforts difficult. Itâs not until Heru is bornâalone, without being the twin of a goddessâthat Hathor sees her opportunity. When Heru comes of age, Hathor swoops in and easily becomes his royal queen, finally achieving the goal that she had her eye on after hundreds of years of yearning. This causes a lot of drama with Aset, but Hathor doesnât care what Aset wants or what she approves of. She has Heru wrapped around her finger, and now the Kemet pantheon is in her hands.
But what to do with it? Well, she has some ideas, and they involve capitalizing on her popularity among foreigners. Hathor has long had contacts outside of Kemet stretching into Sinai. Her close relationship with Baalat Gebal in Gubla (Byblos) makes her a powerful trade negotiator and has given Kemet a strong foothold in Retjenu. And as the goddess that oversees the turquoise mines in the Sinai peninsula, she has access to rare and valuable trade materials, allowing her influence to stretch even further north and east. Hathor is a force to be reckoned with, one that Aset grows ever more cautious of as her son slips further and further away into the realm of Hathorâs influence.
Highlights in her life include:
- Getting very, very close to seducing Hor the Older, which was why she felt her right to queenship was snatched out of her hands. When her father and sisters planned to go to war with Hor the Older, Hathor tried a more⌠alternative way of solving the problem. But when she found out Hor had aspirations for marrying Neith (who had zero interest in that arrangement whatsoever), Hathor lost her temper and switched tactics back to violence.
- She has one son with Heru, Ihy, the god of music and joy. Hathor has struggled to get pregnant again and Heru seems uncomfortable about passing the kingship to a god without some sort of war or sun divine aspect, so Ihy seems out of the running as the next king. (As for the âSons of Horus,â they are his sons in name only and not related to him or Hathor, but thatâs a story for another day.)
- Starting quite the rivalry with her family members. She and Aset do not get along in the slightest, and honestly itâs understandable why. She and Tefnut donât have a very good relationship either due to her jealousy over Tefnutâs firstborn daughter position. She and Sekhmet developed bad blood when Hathor hit on Sekhmetâs husband Ptah at a family gathering. Her youngest sister Bastet mostly ignores her, and Hathor returns the same.
A brief view of Ninurtaâs perspective regarding his adoption into the Assyrian pantheon (becomes quite relevant at the end of the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age - the Assyrian kings really like him!) and his experience in Kassite Babylon.
Adad is more ride or die for Assur, but theyâve also known each other since the Assyrian trading colony period.
The internal crisis of deities who have fallen out of power
Power shifts frequently in history. New empires arise, new leaders make better use of their resources and people, and old centers of power can fall or become subjugated. What happens to deities who once enjoyed power and find themselves becoming more and more irrelevant as time goes on?
Enki is the case study here. The god of the subterranean waters was one of the big three most powerful and well-known deities in the Sumerian pantheon, alongside his brother Enlil and his father Anu. Even when the Akkadian Empire defeated the Sumerian city-states, Enkiâs position hardly changed in the paradigm of divine power, though he found it shifted somewhat to accompany the authority of new deities like Ilaba and Dagan. Still, he was respected. The Akkadian conquerors renamed him to Ea and continued venerating him.
But what happened after that?
The world continued changing. New centers of power arose in Syria and Anatolia, and with it, new gods were born. Enki, once considered one of the most powerful deities, slowly watched himself be eclipsed by younger ones. Fame was a double-edged sword for him â he was famous enough to command some respect from foreign deities, but this clashed with the fact that he simply wasnât the terrifying force of nature he used to be and many of them were more than willing to defy him. New wisdom and knowledge gods were born, new crafting gods were born, new gods of subterranean waters were born. Where did that leave him?
In crisis, apparently. Enki started taking on new identities to run away from the fact that the world was leaving him behind. He took on the name of Hayya and became a Hurrian crafting god, seeking new purpose in life given that his city, Eridu, was abandoned because of climate change.
Having power and then losing it tends to be detrimental to deities. Marduk has suffered from deep depression since Babylon fell to Hatti and remains in the hands of the Kassites. Enlil has gone deep underground, seeking some sort of peace away from the chaos above. Enki continues to have an identity crisis, seeking out new names and, in a way, a new life for himself.
And situations where a city has been lost, like with the gods of Ebla? They scattered after its final fall, some of them carrying the scars of trauma on their psyches as they sought out new pantheons to join. Some of them were successful.
Marduk and Assur are two Mesopotamian deities tied closely to their respective cities - Marduk with the city of Babylon and Assur with the city of Assur. In Pantheon, their destinies have been linked from early on, with their origins beginning in the Sumerian periodâŚ
The two deities are brothers, born at roughly the same time and sired by Enki, the famous god of the subterranean waters. Marduk, then named Asalluhe, was his child by Damkina, his wife, and therefore was more legitimate than Assur. Assurâs mother was an Amorite goddess that Enki was fooling around with, and given that Amorites were poorly looked upon by the Sumerians in this time period, Enki tried his damned hardest to conceal knowledge of said fooling around. Unfortunately, itâs more difficult to hide a godling baby that looks like you and has your familyâs distinctive winged deity appearance, so he was left with a child that was for all intents and purposes unwanted.
Asalluhe and Assur grew up with disparate lives. Enki, not exactly known for his parenting skills, shoved his young sons off on other deities to raise them. In Asalluheâs case, Utu the sun god was given the responsibility to raise one child. Dumuzi was given the responsibility to raise Assur.
Unfortunately, with Dumuziâs proximity to Inanna, that didnât bode well for Assur. While Asalluhe adored his âUncle Utuâ and changed his name to Marduk (calf of the sun) in appreciation, Assur moved away from the south as quickly as possible and returned to the outcrop of rock heâd been born at. The city of Assur formed around him, and as far as he was concerned, he was more than happy to stay far away from the south and all the bad memories it held.
As the climate changed, the southern Sumerian city-states dried up and Babylon came into power. With it, Marduk raised to power, finding himself beloved by the Amorite conquerors who took over Babylon. Marduk enjoyed kingship and power⌠until the gods of Hatti sacked Babylon and left him shattered. Damn Hittites didnât even bother sticking around; the Kassite gods soon moved in and subjugated Marduk under their feet.
Assur fared hardly better. He built an impressive trade network, but his city fell into the control of the Akkadian Empire, the Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia (Shamshi-Adadâs empire), and the Mitanni Empire. Only at the tail end of the Bronze Age did Assur start to regain his independence, enough to start challenging Hatti, Mitanni, and (Kassite) Babylon.
The Iron Age, though, is when the two really start to clashâŚ
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I strongly hold that the Baal Cycle is not "Canaanite mythology." The Ugarites themselves identified Canaanites as "foreign people," and Mot, in particular, is strongly suspected to be a literary invention of Ilumilku, the scribe who wrote the Baal Cycle. To subsume the myths under the vague title of 'Canaanite mythology' is a disservice to Ugarit and its creativity, in my opinion.
So that naturally brought a question to mind: are there any Bronze Age deities who are distinctly Canaanite?
Enter Mekal/Mekar. A Fresh Look at the Mekal Stele (Levy 2018) introduces us to a deity who was attested in northern Palestine during the Bronze Age.
(Levy 2018: 361)
That "r" at the end of his name can be either an "r" or a Semitic "l", hence the Mekal/Mekar options for his name. And he's attested as the lord of Beth-Shean (or Bit-Shani, if you fancy the syllabic Akkadian transcription). How cool is that?
Some thoughts about this deity: his iconography is closely aligned with Baal's known iconography from the time period (which should make one wonder if there isn't some possible synchronization afoot, as if Seth-Baal wasn't strong enough evidence, lol), with one caveat: he has Resheph's headband. So some differences!
What I draw from that is Mekal/Mekar is a Baal-like deity but with some differences. In the Pantheon universe, thus, Mekal is primarily a vegetation god with some rain-bringing abilities, not a storm god proper. He doesn't have the weather manipulation capability that Baal does, but he's good at making flowers and helping agriculture grow!
Given the strong Egyptian influence here, Mekal strikes me as the type who really likes lotuses, too. Maybe he really looks forward to the few visits that Nefertem makes in the foreign northern lands? Well, assuming Sekhmet's willing to let him out...
Anyway, Beth-Shean is a major Egyptian administrative center in the Late Bronze Age, so Sutekh likely stops in Beth-Shean often before continuing onward to Gubla (Byblos), another Egyptian holding. Mekal, with his minimal attestation, seems like a very young god (and it's suspicious that he's not attested afterward). Perhaps he was educated in Kemet as a godling and then brought back to Beth-Shean to rule it, as the Egyptians were known for doing with foreign princes. Couldn't get him to get rid of the beard, though. Some cultural influences refuse to die.
One thing stuck out to me throughout my research: while itâs clear why the ancients envisioned a patriarchal world for their deities (itâs what they were used to socially), how does that work when you really think about it? How do you end up with a society that oppresses powerful magical women? Their society clearly isnât egalitarian.
Human women are oppressed due to male physical domination over women and attempted control of their reproductive capabilities. But what about goddesses? If a goddess has strong magical powers or possesses superhuman strength equivalent to a male deity, how could goddesses be oppressed the way that human women are?
Social conditioning seems the most likely answer - both by older deities and by the human societies they guard. Kemet has a lot of extremely powerful goddesses, notable among them being Aset, and social conditioning isnât going to work on all of them. I feel Aset is one of those (like Neith, Hathor, and Sekhmet) who would challenge the social paradigm their pantheons accept as a status quo.
I think mythological settings really need to take into account systems of oppression and how they would play out in a society as different as one composed of deities. It results in a lot of interesting food for thought.