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Statue of Tawaret, showing her composite body
In
Egyptian mythology, ''Tawaret'' (also spelt 'Taurt', 'Tuat', 'Taueret', 'Tuart', 'Ta-weret', 'Taweret', and 'Taueret', and in
Greek, 'Thoeris' and 'Toeris'). Her name means ''(one) who is great''. In English she is known famously as,
Manufiki. She was originally the demon-wife of
Apep, the original god of
evil. Since Apep was viewed as residing below the horizon, and only present at night, evil during the day was envisaged as being a result of Tawaret's maleficence.
As the counterpart of Apep, who was always below the horizon, Tawaret was seen as being the northern sky, the
constellation roughly covering the area of present-day
Draco, which always lies above the horizon. Thus Tawaret was known as ''mistress of the horizon'', and was depicted as such on the ceiling of the tomb of
Seti I in the
Valley of the Kings.
In their
art, Tawaret was depicted as a composite of all the things the Egyptians feared, the major part of her being
hippopotamus, since this is what the constellation most resembled, with the arms and legs of a
lioness, and with the back of a
crocodile. On occasion, later, rather than having a crocodile back, she was seen as having a separate crocodile resting on her back, which was thus interpreted as
Sobek, the crocodile-god, and said to be her consort.
Early during the
Old Kingdom, the Egyptians came to see female hippopotamuses as less aggressive than the males, and began to view their aggression only as one of protecting their young, particularly since it is the males that are territorially aggressive. Consequently, Tawaret became seen, very early in Egyptian history, as a deity of protection in pregnancy and childbirth, and pregnant women wore
amulets with her name or likeness to protect their pregnancies. Her image could also be found on
knives made from hippopotamus
ivory, which would be used as
wands in
rituals to drive evil spirits away from mothers and children.
In most subsequent depictions, Tawaret was depicted with features of a pregnant woman, in a composite addition to the animal-compound she was also seen as, which usually took the form of pendulous breasts, the full pregnant abdomen, and with long and straight human hair on her head.
As a protector, she was often shown with one arm resting on the
sa symbol, which symbolized protection, and on occasion carried an
ankh, the symbol of life, or a knife, which would be used to threaten evil
spirits.
As such a protector, Tawaret was also given titles reflecting a more positive nature, including 'Opet' (also spelt 'Ipet', 'Apet', and 'Ipy'), meaning ''harem'', and 'Reret' (also spelt 'Rert', 'Reret', seen as the offspring of
Nut)
As the hippopotamus was associated with the
Nile, these more positive ideas of Tawaret allowed her to be seen as a goddess of the annual flooding of the Nile, and the harvest that it brought. Ultimately, although only a
household deity, since she was still considered the consort of Apep, Tawaret was seen as one who protected against evil by restraining it, and became known as ''(one) who is great'', which is what ''Tawaret'' means.
When
Set fell from grace in the
Egyptian pantheon, as a result of being favoured by the (
xenophobically) hated
Hyksos rulers, and he gradually took over the position of Apep, as the god of evil, Tawaret became seen as his
concubine. She was seen as concubine rather than wife, as Set already was married to the extremely different goddess,
Nephthys, to whom no parallels could be drawn. It was said that Tawaret had been originally an evil goddess, but changed her ways, and held Set back on a chain.
As the goddess of motherhood, Tawaret was eventually assimilated into the identity of
Mut, the great-mother goddess.