Examples of using Horus in English and their translations into Vietnamese
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
show no break in the sacred tradition; he added the power of Seth to Horus.
I first heard the story of Chay-Ara High Priestess of Horus, the Hawk God.
It means"The two lords" and refers to the divine state patrons Horus and Seth.
Horus Heresy- a board game focusing on the final battle of the Horus Heresy the battle for the Emperor's Palace; this game is a re-imagining of
so called canopic jars, modelled after the four sons of Horus who would protect the organs,
Isis(Hathor-Isis) and her infant, Horus, were the deities connected with Gebtu, named Coptos during the Greco-Roman period, probably due to the reinterpretation of the Two Hawks of the Nome, Harawî, standard as Min and Horus.
Newberry proposed that the priests of Horus and Seth fought each other"in the Manner of a war of the roses" during the second half of the Second dynasty.
Conversely, the Eye of Horus was depicted frequently on amulets to offer protection to the living
constructing a temple which, technically, was dedicated to Horus there, although the presence of Re-Harakhti and Amun-Re is easily observed.
The first sign of the king's Horus name is clearly present while the second sign is debated. von Beckerath commits only to the first sign and reads Kha,
It is carved with the name of Ay and shows him offering to Horus"Lord of heaven", demonstrating that a pyramid was
The obelisk stands for the house of life at the city of"O'n", whereas the two hawks are symbolic of Horus, the Egyptian god at that time.
as a serekh patron, but also linked his name to Horus.
Attis in Asia Minor, and Horus in Egypt.
as well as the fact that the letters are addressed to the king himself, using his Horus name.
used plural patron deities, such as"she who is allowed to see Horus and Seth" and"she who carries Horus and Seth".
initiated various works at the Temple of Horus at Mesen.
amass an army powerful enough to return and conquer Horus' kingdom.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, which shows Nectanebo II standing before the image of Horus, no other annotated portraits of Nectanebo II are known.
Attis in Asia Minor, and Horus in Egypt.