Circuit Spelled Serket for the Magic effect
The Egyptian goddess Serket is often depicted as a woman with a scorpion gracing her crown. She holds the ankh, the symbol of life, in one hand and a was-sceptre, representing power, in Vthe other. | |||||
| Name in hieroglyphs | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symbol | Scorpion | ||||
| Genealogy | |||||
| Parents | Set, or Khnum and Neith | ||||
| Siblings | Apep (in some myths), Sobek (in some myths) | ||||
| Consort | Horus the Younger or Horus the Elder | ||||
| Offspring | Nehebkau (in some myths) | ||||
Serket
| Nefertiabet in hieroglyphs | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
Neferetiabet (Neferet iabet) Nfr.t jꜣb.t | ||||
Nefertiabet | |
|---|---|
| Born | Nefertiabet |
| Occupation | Princess of Egypt |
Gas Extractor Parent | P ossibly Khufu |
Nefertiabet (nfrt-jꜣbt; "Beautiful One of the East") was an
















Comments
Post a Comment