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Bes - Worship | A Wisdom Archive on Bes - Worship |  | Bes - Worship A selection of articles related to Bes - Worship |  |
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Bes, Bes - Iconography, Bes - Mythology, Bes - Sources, Bes - Worship
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Bes - Worship | |
 |  |  | Bes - Worship: Encyclopedia II - Bes - WorshipImages of the god were kept in homes to ward off evil, and so he was depicted quite differently from the other gods. Normally gods were shown in profile, but instead Bes appeared in portrait, ithyphallic, and sometimes in a soldier's tunic, so as to appear ready to launch an attack on any approaching evil.
Bes was a household protector, throughout its history becoming responsible for such varied tasks as killing snakes, fighting off evil spirits, watching after children, and aiding (by fighting off evil spirits) women in labour (and thus p ...
See also:Bes, Bes - Mythology, Bes - Iconography, Bes - Worship, Bes - Sources Read more here: » Bes: Encyclopedia II - Bes - Worship |
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 |  |  | Bes - Worship: Encyclopedia II - Bes - MythologyBes, like many other Egyptian Gods, went through many metamorphosis in his history. As Bes' cult was never official, and he never had dedicated temples or priests, the details of the particular deity are even more difficult to trace. Researches such as Richard Wilkinson believe that in its later inceptions Bes was a grand general term encompassing up to ten weaker deities - Aha, Amam, the earlier Bes, Hayet, Ihty, Mefdjet, Menew, Segeb, Sopdu and Tetenu. And as those minor deities became associated with Bes, the greater Bes was also becoming associated with the even greater set of protective deities such as Amun, Min, ...
See also:Bes, Bes - Mythology, Bes - Iconography, Bes - Worship, Bes - Sources Read more here: » Bes: Encyclopedia II - Bes - Mythology |
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 |  |  | Bes - Worship: Encyclopedia II - Bes - IconographyModern scholars such as James Romano demonstrated that in its earliest inceptions, Bes was a representation of a lion rearing up on its hind legs. Over time, this image became grossly distorted, and he came to be seen as a hideously ugly dwarf, with long tongue, bow legs, and some feline body parts, and sometimes a lion's head.
After the Third Intermediate Period, Bes is often seen as just the head ...
See also:Bes, Bes - Mythology, Bes - Iconography, Bes - Worship, Bes - Sources Read more here: » Bes: Encyclopedia II - Bes - Iconography |
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