Osorkon the High Priest of Amun's Inscription
Osorkon the High Priest of Amun's Inscription
Worship and mythology carrying on the world's legends and official beliefs in antiquity sometimes in famous "chronicles" inscribed on the Bubastai Gate at Karnak the spotlight of spices passing to the pharaoh the goddess Muth of power wife of Amun-Ra the leader of the living goddesses examining the goddess of the sky and the legend of Khonsu. Amun became the king of the Egyptian gods in the Middle Kingdom often seen as the ram or serpent of mythology again she would become revered in the New Kingdom.

A stela dedicated to the god Osiris, created by Shepenwepet, daughter of Osorkon, the high priest of Amun. This limestone stela features a low-relief carving depicting an act of worship with Osiris on the left and the giver of sacrifice on the right. At the top of the stela is the symbol of a winged sun disk, a symbol of protection.
The stela a symbol of protection and immortality contains interesting details dedicated to the god Osiris the limestone carving characterized by its bas-relief technique depicts a scene of sacrificial offerings. At the very top of the stela is carved a winged sun disk. This includes inscriptions unearthed in Tyre villages and archaeological sites in Lower Egypt containing the remains of ancient Egyptian temples dating back to the 13th century BC.

This basalt bas-relief appears in an inscription of Pharaoh Ramses II slaying Egyptian enemies in front of Ra-Horakti the supreme sun god in ancient Egyptian belief. It is a combination of Ra the sun god and Horus the sky god. Dating back to the Ptolemaic Period approximately 285-221 BC. during the reign of Ptolemy II or III this bas-relief depicts a king and the ram-headed god. This inscription is from the Temple of Isis in Behbeit el-Hagar Egypt the image shows a pharaoh offering sacrifices to the ram-headed god Khnum or Heryshaf behbeit el-Hagar is a village and archaeological site in Lower Egypt containing the remains of an ancient Egyptian temple dedicated to the goddess Isis also known as Ision.


