Very interesting connections. Excellent graphics, art and editing with poignant content. Appreciated the detail of front loader example of the "dung" ones you made, with excellent "footage" of them too. ps. @ 6:11 in the blue side/sky there is an image clear to see (to me anyway) of quite large "monkey king (like)" wearing a hat & tutu and holding his hands up with bulging eyes. A.I. CGI, A.R. or, a really busy entity me thinks.
Venturing into the world of storytelling and creative videos, VideoGPT becomes the invisible hand that refines my content, making it resonate with a professional vibe.
The ancient Egyptian pantheon had different gods in different parts of the country and the gods worshiped in general changed throughout the roughly 3000 years of the existence of the ancient Egyptian civilization. There wasn’t a strict canon like in the abrahamic religions.
@@youthoughtaboutit6946 Oh yes I do realize that but I'm just wondering why they had different gods for basically the same thing. I mean isn't it a little strange.
@@-RONNIEto us, absolutely, but you must remember that we’re looking back at their pantheon in motility, which the ancient Egyptians generally speaking never did due to the decentralized nature of the Bronze Age world, with the way information traveled, local matters took precedence over national or international ones except in major events or circumstances and as such local gods often took precedence in their worship over national ones most of the time. Add to that the fact that Ra wasn’t the big god on campus in, say, the old kingdom, while this got popped into worship whenever he did wherever his center was, and having overlap makes sense to some degree. Its kind of like how gods like Ra-Horakhty, Amun-Amun-Ra, Zeus-Ammon, Serapis, or Hermanubis were all worshipped even alongside worshiping their seperate counterparts, and thus to a modern logical minds making not much logical sense to us from a coherence perspective.
@@youthoughtaboutit6946 oh no I get what you're saying with the culture and time period but I mean it's still kind of strange right having similar or multiples gods & goddesses. It's like having one for the ocean then another for the river and one more for a lake or pond
The important thing to know about Egyptian religion is that unlike the gods of other ancient civilizations, such as the Mesopotamian deities and Greco-Roman deities who were viewed as having power over natural forces such as Zeus's lightning bolts or Inanna having power over fertility, sexual desire and war, Egyptian deities did not just represent forces of nature; to the ancient Egyptians their gods WERE the forces of nature. And three (3) seems to be an important number to them. They organized their cults (not in the modern sense) into trinities, a family of deities into father, mother, and son (such as Osiris, Isis, and Horus) based on their localities of worship. In the case of solar deities, Ra the sun was represented in three aspects of the journey of the solar boat: sunrise, noon, and sunset. Khepri represented the rising sun, Ra-Harakhty represented the sun as it traveled through the sky, and Atum represented the setting sun.
Гърция - американски турист, намерен мъртъв на малък гръцки остров. Още трима туристи са в неизвестност...предполагам че причината е в това, че не са "адж-ии"....
Thanks for watching! :)
Man I could really go for a caprisun right now idk why
Wow that can’t be a coincidence!!! Caprisun = Khepri Sun
What would the Egyptian gods use as their individual Yu-Gi-Oh decks?
Really liking these myth stories.
A fantastic exploration of mythology! I was completely engrossed from start to finish. Can't wait to watch more!
Thank you for showcasing my Lord Khepri ❤
Awesome as always thanks ❤
This was super helpful, thanks!
Great as always, thank you!
Very interesting connections. Excellent graphics, art and editing with poignant content. Appreciated the detail of front loader example of the "dung" ones you made, with excellent "footage" of them too.
ps. @ 6:11 in the blue side/sky there is an image clear to see (to me anyway) of quite large "monkey king (like)" wearing a hat & tutu and holding his hands up with bulging eyes. A.I. CGI, A.R. or, a really busy entity me thinks.
Great video
I hope you’re ok brother…Peace & health (soul, heart & mind) be with you. 💚
Venturing into the world of storytelling and creative videos, VideoGPT becomes the invisible hand that refines my content, making it resonate with a professional vibe.
You ran out of material? Do a video on the Key of David!
Hmm……I had the sound turned down low I thought that this ancient Kemet god was a Samurai !
"Ladies and gentlemen...the Beatles!!"
Isn't Ra the god of the Sun how come there's another one for the rising Sun I mean that's a little weird right
The ancient Egyptian pantheon had different gods in different parts of the country and the gods worshiped in general changed throughout the roughly 3000 years of the existence of the ancient Egyptian civilization. There wasn’t a strict canon like in the abrahamic religions.
@@youthoughtaboutit6946 Oh yes I do realize that but I'm just wondering why they had different gods for basically the same thing. I mean isn't it a little strange.
@@-RONNIEto us, absolutely, but you must remember that we’re looking back at their pantheon in motility, which the ancient Egyptians generally speaking never did due to the decentralized nature of the Bronze Age world, with the way information traveled, local matters took precedence over national or international ones except in major events or circumstances and as such local gods often took precedence in their worship over national ones most of the time. Add to that the fact that Ra wasn’t the big god on campus in, say, the old kingdom, while this got popped into worship whenever he did wherever his center was, and having overlap makes sense to some degree. Its kind of like how gods like Ra-Horakhty, Amun-Amun-Ra, Zeus-Ammon, Serapis, or Hermanubis were all worshipped even alongside worshiping their seperate counterparts, and thus to a modern logical minds making not much logical sense to us from a coherence perspective.
@@youthoughtaboutit6946 oh no I get what you're saying with the culture and time period but I mean it's still kind of strange right having similar or multiples gods & goddesses. It's like having one for the ocean then another for the river and one more for a lake or pond
The important thing to know about Egyptian religion is that unlike the gods of other ancient civilizations, such as the Mesopotamian deities and Greco-Roman deities who were viewed as having power over natural forces such as Zeus's lightning bolts or Inanna having power over fertility, sexual desire and war, Egyptian deities did not just represent forces of nature; to the ancient Egyptians their gods WERE the forces of nature. And three (3) seems to be an important number to them. They organized their cults (not in the modern sense) into trinities, a family of deities into father, mother, and son (such as Osiris, Isis, and Horus) based on their localities of worship. In the case of solar deities, Ra the sun was represented in three aspects of the journey of the solar boat: sunrise, noon, and sunset. Khepri represented the rising sun, Ra-Harakhty represented the sun as it traveled through the sky, and Atum represented the setting sun.
you know, first it was the rising sun and then it was the rising sun, how was that place named and who is there biggest guy for some reason
Did the Japanese steal that for the nickname of their pervert country?
Well at least I know how to get to sleep tonight
Khepri sunrise= Capri sun😂
Гърция - американски турист, намерен мъртъв на малък гръцки остров. Още трима туристи са в неизвестност...предполагам че причината е в това, че не са "адж-ии"....
😂 this is my name 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉shout out to me
Cool
I bet your parents only named you after him is 'cause it sounded ghetto.
@AprilRedrum55 Who you referring to?