Horus - meaning and definition. What is Horus
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What (who) is Horus - definition


Horus (mythology)         
ARCADIAN PRINCE IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY
Horus (mythology)
In Greek mythology, Horus (Ancient Greek: Ὅρον means 'boundary, landmark') was an Arcadian prince as one of the 50 sons of the impious King Lycaon either by the naiad Cyllene,Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Antiquitates Romanae 1.13.
Horus (athlete)         
BOXER
Horus (fl. 4th century) was a Cynic philosopher and Olympic boxer, who was victorious at the Olympic games in Antioch in 364 AD.
Horus Bird (pharaoh)         
SOVEREIGN
Horus Bird; Horus Bird (Pharaoh)
Horus Bird, also known as Horus-Ba, may have been a pharaoh who may have had a very short reign between the First and Second Dynasty of Egypt.
Examples of use of Horus
1. Horus is a falcon–headed god, who represented the greatest cosmic powers for ancient Egyptians.
2. The confiscated collection also included 1' figurines of the revered ancient Egyptian gods of Horus and Thoth, wrapped as gifts.
3. The artifact haul included an alabaster chamber pot with a cap in the form of the Egyptian hawk god Horus, several necklaces with precious stones, an inscribed scarab stone and a church incensory.
4. It‘s worth remembering that in Egypt‘s founding myth the battles between the gods Horus (the reasoning heart) and Seth (energy and force) were resolved not on the battlefield, but by recourse to adjudication.
5. The judge decreed that although Horus was in the right, Seth would not be cast into darkness but given respect and mobilised to protect Ra‘s sunship (life and order) from the dragon Anophis (death and chaos). Egypt‘s self image is centred on order, solidarity and the rule of law.