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war
By Elizabeth Stein for Mythos Atlas. About the author. Editorial notes are grounded in the site's cited sources and can be challenged through the contact page.
After Osiris descended to rule the underworld, the throne of Egypt stood empty. His son Horus, raised in secret by Isis in the marshes of the Delta, came of age and presented himself before the Ennead, the council of the great gods, to claim his father's crown. But Set, who had murdered Osiris and seized power, was not prepared to relinquish it.
The tribunal of gods, presided over by Ra, debated the matter. Most favored Horus as the rightful heir, but Ra was reluctant to grant the throne to one so young, and Set argued that only a god of his strength could defend the solar barque against Apophis each night.
What followed was an extraordinary series of contests, tricks, and trials that stretched across eighty years. The gods could not resolve the dispute through deliberation, so they turned to competition.
Set and Horus raced in boats made of stone, though Horus secretly made his from wood painted to look like stone. They transformed into hippopotamuses and contested who could stay submerged longest. Each trial was marked by trickery and violence on both sides.
Horus and Set contended for the office of Osiris. And their contending was great, for they were mighty ones and the tribunal could not decide between them.
In their fiercest confrontation, Set tore out one of Horus's eyes, splitting it into six pieces and scattering them across Egypt. Horus, in turn, injured Set grievously. Thoth, the god of wisdom and magic, gathered the pieces of Horus's eye and restored it, creating the Wedjat, the Eye of Horus, which would become one of the most powerful protective symbols in all of Egyptian culture.
As the contest dragged on with no resolution, Isis and Thoth persuaded the Ennead to write to Osiris in the underworld to seek his judgment. Osiris's response was a masterwork of divine authority: he reminded the gods that he controlled the land of the dead, where all of them would eventually dwell. His messenger stars, he warned, could reach anyone, anywhere.
The implied threat was unmistakable. The lord of the afterlife could send demons to collect any god who defied justice.
Faced with Osiris's warning, even Ra relented. The Ennead declared Horus the rightful king of Egypt, inheriting his father's throne. Set was not destroyed but given a new role: he was placed in the sky as the god of storms and chaos, tasked with using his tremendous strength to protect Ra's barque during its nightly journey through the underworld.
The resolution established the foundational principle of Egyptian kingship. Every pharaoh was considered a living Horus, and upon death became an Osiris. The story legitimized royal succession and demonstrated that legitimate authority, not mere strength, was the true measure of a king.
Set damaged Horus's eye, while Horus castrated Set. Eventually, Osiris sent a threatening letter from the underworld, and the gods decided Horus was the rightful king. Horus's damaged eye was healed by Thoth and became the Wedjat.
This story legitimizes royal succession and explains the origin of the Eye of Horus symbol.