Found you a movie about ancient Egypt, "/2006/02/27/0000092114.html"
Chinese name: History Channel Ancient Egypt - Land of the Gods
English name: Egypt, Land of the Gods
Resource type: DVDRip
Resource type: DVDRip
There is a movie about ancient Egypt. Land of the Gods
Resource Type: DVDRip
Release Date: 2005
Region: U.S.A.
Language: English
Synopsis: Ancient Egyptian beliefs were polytheistic, and most of them were symbolized by animals.
Amon
The main god of Thebes, who became the main god of the country as a result of the rise of Thebes. The name means "The Hidden One" and the sacred animals are the goose and the ram.
Anubis
The god of the dead who takes the form of a mountain dog, and the guardian of the cemetery. Son of Set and Nephthys and creator of mummies. It guides the souls of the dead to the place of judgment, as well as overseeing the judgment and saving the dead from a second death.
Anmuket Anuket
Anmuket was greatly worshipped in Egypt and was regarded as the daughter (or companion) of Knum and Shati. The sacred animal is the gazelle. She was treated as a god of (cold) water, and humans wore a crown of feathers on their heads.
Aton Aton (Aten)
The disk on the head of the sun, the sun-god at the time when the morning sun is just peeking over the horizon. Worshipped as the one true god at the time of the Reformation of Akheneten (i.e. Amenhotep IV), his successor, King Tutankhamun, restored the former worship of Amun-Ra by the magi.
Apis Apis
It was the first god to manifest his divinity in an animal, and was much worshipped by the Memphians. Symbolizing abundance and productivity, it was a bull god who wore a sun disk and a sacred serpent, and there are now sacred bull tombs in Memphis where these Apis sacred bulls are buried.
Atum
The sun god of the setting sun, the first of the gods, the chief god of the creation of the world, and the father of Sue and Tefnut.
Bast (Bastet)
God of cats, with a center of worship in the Delta city of Bubastis. Since the cat became a pet, Bast became a very important god and image in the household. (The cat killing the serpent that attacked the sun god was often painted on papyrus).
Bes Bes
Originally a primitive African belief, it entered Egypt during the Twelfth Dynasty as a bearded and amusing dwarf, showing the fruits of a gathering of imaginations not found in the Egyptians of the past. He was regarded as the god of music and protected the children who performed.
Four Sons of Horus
The four sons were responsible for protecting the body of Osiris.
Aset Amset
One of the four sons of Horus, who appeared to be mummified and protected the livers of the already dead, was also protected by the goddess Isis.
Hapi Hapi (Golden Dawn, Ahephi)
One of the four sons of Horus, a mummy with the head of a baboon, protects the lungs of the already dead and is also protected by the goddess Nephthys.
Duamutef Duamutef (Tuamutef; Golden Dawn, Thmoomathph)
One of the four sons of Horus, a mummy with the head of a fox-wolf, protects the stomachs of the already dead, and is also protected by the goddess Ness.
Qebhsenuef Qebhsenuef
One of the four sons of Horus, a mummy with the head of a falcon, protecting the intestines of the already dead, also protected by the goddess Seleket.
Edjo Edjo
Serpent god of the Delta, symbol and patron of Lower Egypt.
Given to Geb (Seb)
God of the earth, denoting the ground where plants flourish. God of the earth, son of Su and Tefnut; brother and husband of Nut; father of Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys. The sacred beast is the goose, usually in the form of a black or green-skinned man, representing growing things and the fertile Nile, respectively. Some say it holds the power over whether the souls of the dead go to hell or not, preventing people from going to heaven.
Horus Horus
The Eagle God, guardian of kingship, in the form of an eagle; son of Osiris and Isis. Pharaoh is the earthly Horus.
Harpocrates Harpocrates (Hor-pa-kraat; Golden Dawn, Hoor-par-kraat)
Horus the child, used to distinguish it from the older Horus. It protects small children in Upper Egypt, with parted hair and sucking fingers.
Hathor Hathor (Het-Heru, Het-Hert)
Goddess of love and fertility, the most beautiful of all the ancient Egyptian goddesses, in the form of a cow. One of the oldest Egyptian goddesses, it is referred to in Greek as the goddess of the sky. It was often regarded as the same as Isis, and was mainly worshipped at Edfu, thought to be the wife of Horus. At Thebes it was considered the god of death, but is generally recognized as the god of love, dance, wine and foreign affairs.
Heqet
The frog-headed goddess, one of the eight most worshipped by hermits. In Antinoe it was regarded as the wife of Knum.
Heru-ra-ha Heru-ra-ha
Consists of Ra-Hoor-Khuit and Hoor-par-Kraat. The name means "Horus and Ra be Praised!" in Egyptian, but of course, this is a different translation from the original, or perhaps it is just a translation to enter a different culture.
Imhotep (Imouthis)
was an architect, physician, and chancellor of King Zoser of the Third Dynasty, for whom he built the Step Pyramid at Sakkara. After his death, he was worshipped as the god of medicine and son of the god Bhuta, the patron saint of clerks along with the god Thoth; in Greece, he was honored as Asklepios.
Isis (Auset)
Goddess of the dead, and also god of life and health. Wife of Osiris, mother of Horus, and sister of Nephthys. Arguably one of the most important and popular goddesses in Egyptian mythology, the ancient Egyptians believed her to be the most powerful magician in the universe because she knew the secret name of the sun god. She protected Horus' son Eshet; helped bring Osiris back to life and helped him govern the Underworld.
Kaihons Khons (Chons)/Konsu Khonsu
One of the three gods of Thebes (Amun and Mut), the god of the moon, and the god of healing, whose father was the god Amun, and mother the god Mut; the three gods stood together in one temple, and there were temples to them on the outskirts of Karnak. The most famous story about it would be that it was pitted against Thoth in the ancient game of Senet and wagered its light; Thoth won the game, and so it was unable to show all of its light - except when there was a full moon (which may be the legend that the moon has a yin and yang).
Khepri Khepri
Beetle-god, also the sun-god of the morning, often thought to be identical with Ra. Representing the path of the sun as it travels through the heavens for a day, Kheper means many in Egyptian, but depending on the context, mostly means to create or transform ("to create" or "to transform"), and also represents the sacred beetle. It is so honored because the sun rises like a beetle rolling its eggs, and thus it represents the propeller of the sun across the sky.
Khnum Khnum
The ram-god, one of the gods of creation, mated to either Hekwit, Ness, or Shati.
Min Min (Menu, Amsu)
God of production and harvest, also patron god of roads and desert travelers, and the main god of Kobuthis. His full name is Menu-ka-mut-f ("Min, Bull of his Mother"), and he is a very masculine god to whom romaine lettuce is offered as a sacrifice and then eaten as a sign of adulthood (bar mitzvah). He is the husband of Quatre, the goddess of love.
Mo Month (Mentu, Men Thu)
The chief god of Thebes before the rise of Amun, usually appeared in the form of a falcon's head along with Horus, the god of war.
Mut Mut (Golden Dawn, Auramooth)
Goddess of war, wife of the god Amun, mother of the god Khonsu, in the form of a lioness, the name Mut means mother in Egyptian, mother of the moon god Khonsu.
Mat Maat
God of justice, truth, and order, a young goddess with a feather (bearing her name). When judgment is performed in the Underworld, it is the heart of the dead that is weighed on either side of the scales, along with her feather. Wife of Toth, daughter of Ra, whose name suggests truth and justice, order.
Nefertum Nefertum
The youngest son of Bhuta and Sekhomeet, often portrayed as a young child with a crown on his head sitting in a blooming lotus flower.
Neith Neith (Net, Neit; Gold Dawn, Thoum-aesh-neith)
Very ancient goddess of war, worshipped at Delta, goddess of wisdom, protector of Dumitriph, and mother of the crocodile god Sobek.
Mehobet Nekhbet
Goddess of protection of Upper Egypt, often wore the crown of Upper Egypt.
Nephthys Nephthys
Goddess who guarded the dead. Wife of Set and mother of Anubis. Given to the youngest child of Boo and Nut, she turned her back on her husband Set when Set killed Osiris, and assisted Isis in caring for Horus. Of the four sons of Osiris, it protected Habi.
Nut Nut
Sky goddess and mother of the sun. Daughter of Sue and Tefnut, wife and sister to Boo, mother of Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys, usually depicted as a woman with blue skin, a body containing stars, and limbs propped up on the ground to indicate the curvature of the sky over the earth.
Osiris Osiris
God of abundance and giver of civilization. King of the Underworld, executes judgment on whether or not a person may have eternal life after death. It is usually depicted in frescoes, and if the face is painted with green pigment, it indicates that it is in the process of resurrection or has been resurrected. It was worshipped in Abydos, which is why there are many temples to it. It became popular after the Middle Kingdom, and by the Eighteenth Dynasty it was probably the most widely worshipped deity, while continuing into Late Egypt.
Butah Ptah
The creator of all things, and in addition to being the patron saint of kings and workers, was also the chief god of Memphis. Usually appears as a mummified figure of a bearded man wearing a brimless hat, holding the scepter of Uas (phoenix-headed), Ankh and Djed (symbol of stability). Often worshipped under the name of Ptah-seker-ausar along with Seker and Osiris; husband of Sekhomet and father of Naftu.
Qet Qetesh
Originally a Syrian deity, the goddess of love and beauty. Usually appears as a beautiful naked woman standing or sitting on a lion, holding a flower, mirror or snake in her hand, in a frontal view (unlike the usual Egyptian paintings), wife of Min.
Ra Ra
The god of the sun, who held absolute authority in the Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom. Father of Su and Nephmut, grandfather of Nut and Gob, great-grandfather of Osiris and others, great-great-grandfather of Horus. After the Eighteenth Dynasty, because of the popularity of Osiris & Isis, along with it, to Ra netjer-aa neb-pet ("Ra, the great God, Lord of Heaven"), and later, it became Amun-Ra, the Lord of the Universe.
Sati Sati
The elephant goddess, wife of Knum, had a human head and wore the crown of Upper Egypt, and had antelope horns on her head.
Seth
God of the desert, foreign countries, symbolizing the stormy seasons, and the greatest enemy of Osiris and Horus. It was revived in the 19th Dynasty as a great god who mercifully suppressed the desert and foreign powers to protect Egypt.
Seker
The god of light, who protected the souls of the dead through the underworld to the afterlife, and was regarded in Memphis as Ptah-seker or Ptah-seker-ausar with part of the divinity of Butah, usually a mummy with an eagle's head, similar to Butah.
Sekhmet
The lioness, regarded in Memphis as the wife of Buta, was created by Ra from the fire of his own eyes to punish people for their sins, and in later times was transformed into a peace-loving goddess similar to the charitable Best.
Selket
The goddess of scorpions, mostly portrayed as having scorpions balanced on her head, petitioned for the living innocents, and was also used as a helper of women in labor and delivery, and once sent seven scorpions to protect Isis from the persecution of Seth. It was the protector of the Quibben Hamuf, and became famous when some of its collection from the tomb of King Tutankhamen was exhibited in the United States in the 1970s.
Serapis
The god of the Age of Decline, devised by the Greeks as a synthesis of Osiris and Apis, was regarded as the husband of Isis, the god of the afterlife and of fertility and productivity, and as a physician and troubleshooter. It never gained much Egyptian worship, worshipped at Alexandria.
Su Shu
The god of the atmosphere (air), usually found with Nut and Gheb, stood in the center, supporting Nut, while Gheb lay horizontally below. The name may be related to the root word she (dry, empty). It is a god anthropomorphized out of sunlight, sharing a soul with Tefnut.
Sobek Sobek
The god of the crocodile, worshipped in Arsinoe, was known by the Greek name of Crocoldilopolis, meaning crocodile; it was said to be fourfold divine because it possessed the four elements: fire of Ra, air of Sue, earth of Geb and water of Osiris. In the Book of the Dead, it protects the newly born Horus and helps Isis and Nephthys destroy Set.
Sothis Sothis
Feminine name for Sirius, which in early times was actually Orion (being the consort of Sahu-Osiris, which was Orion), united with Hathor.
Tevmt Tefnut
Goddess of the rain clouds, daughter of Ra, wife and sister of Sue, mother of Gob and Nut, a goddess with the head of a lioness, the name may be derived from Teftef (to spit, to moisten) and Nu (water, sky).
Toth
The god of calculation, learning and wisdom, in the form either of a red heron or a baboon, with a pen and scroll, and the inventor of writing.
Toho Aires Thoueris
Homeric goddess of productivity and protection of women in childbirth, companion of Bes.