Atum

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Atum
in hieroglyphs
t
U15
A40
Atum
Part of a series
of articles
on
Ancient Egyptian religion


 
Main Beliefs
Paganism · Pantheism · Polytheism
Soul · Duat
Mythology · Numerology
Practises
Offering formula · Funerals · Heka
Deities
Amun · Amunet · Anubis · Anuket
Apep · Apis · Aten · Atum
Bastet · Bat · Bes
Four sons of Horus
Geb · Hapy · Hathor · Heqet
Horus · Isis · Khepri  · Khnum
Khonsu · Kuk · Maahes  · Ma'at
Mafdet · Menhit · Meretseger
Meskhenet · Monthu · Min · Mnevis
Mut · Naunet · Neith · Nekhbet
Nephthys · Nut · Osiris · Pakhet
Ptah · Ra · Ra-Horakhty · Reshep
Satis · Sekhmet · Seker · Selket
Sobek · Sopdu · Set · Seshat · Shu
Taweret · Tefnut · Thoth
Wadjet · Wadj-wer · Wepwawet · Wosret
Texts
Amduat · Books of Breathing
Book of Caverns · Book of the Dead
Book of the Earth · Book of Gates
Book of the Netherworld
Other
Atenism · Curse of the Pharaohs

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Atum (alternatively spelled Tem, Temu, Tum, and Atem) is an important deity in Egyptian mythology, whose cult centred on the city of Heliopolis. His name is thought to be derived from the word 'tem' which means to complete or finish. Thus he has been interpreted as being the 'complete one' and also the finisher of the world, which he returns to watery chaos at the end of the creative cycle. As creator he was seen as the underlying substance of the world, the deities and all things being made of his flesh or alternatively being his kas.

Atum is one of the most important and frequently mentioned deities from earliest times, as evidenced by his prominence in the Pyramid Texts, where he is portrayed as both a creator and father to the king. He is usually depicted as a man wearing either the royal head-cloth or the dual white and red crown of Upper Egypt, and Lower Egypt, reinforcing his connection with kingship. Sometimes he also is shown as a serpent, the form which he returns to at the end of the creative cycle and also occasionally as a mongoose, lion, bull, lizard, or ape.


In the Heliopolitan Ennead cosmogony established in the sixth dynasty, he was considered to be the first god, having created himself, sitting on a mound (benben) (or identified with the mound itself), from the primordial waters (Nu). Early myths state that Atum created the god Shu and goddess Tefnut from spitting or from his semen by masturbation in the city of Annu (the Egyptian name for Heliopolis)[1], a belief strongly associated with Atum's nature as an hermaphrodite (hence his name meaning completeness). Strictly, the myth states that Atum ejaculated his semen into his mouth, impregnating himself, possibly indicating autofellatio, which has led many to misinterpret (Via euphemism or Bowdlerization) the myth as indicating creation from mucus.