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cosmology
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.
Every morning, Ra, the supreme sun god, rises in the east aboard his great solar barque, the Mandjet, also called the Barque of Millions of Years. As the vessel crests the horizon, its golden light spills across the land, banishing the darkness and bringing warmth, life, and order to the world. Ra stands at the prow in his full glory, the solar disk blazing upon his head, accompanied by a retinue of gods who serve as his crew.
Throughout the day, the barque sails across the body of the sky goddess Nut, traveling from east to west. Ra ages as the day progresses: he is Khepri the scarab at dawn, Ra at his zenith at noon, and the elderly Atum at sunset. The people of Egypt could trace the passage of time simply by watching the sun's journey overhead.
As evening falls and the barque reaches the western horizon, Ra transfers to a second vessel, the Mesektet, the Night Barque. He enters the Duat, the Egyptian underworld, through the western gate. Here begins the most perilous part of his journey, a twelve-hour voyage through twelve regions of darkness, each guarded by gates, serpents, and demons.
I am Ra, who rises in the east. I am the one who crosses the sky. The beings of the underworld open their gates before me. I know the paths of the Duat.
The dead line the shores of the underworld river, crying out for Ra's light. As the barque passes, they receive a brief moment of illumination and warmth before being plunged back into darkness. Ra speaks the names of each gate's guardian to pass through, for in Egypt, to know a name was to hold power over it.
The greatest danger comes in the seventh hour, when the barque encounters Apophis, the colossal serpent of chaos, who seeks to swallow Ra and prevent the sun from ever rising again. Apophis is not merely a monster but the embodiment of uncreation, the force that would return all existence to the formless waters of Nun.
The gods aboard the barque rally to defend Ra. Set, paradoxically the god of chaos himself, stands at the prow with a great spear and drives it into Apophis. Isis and other deities use magic to bind and repel the serpent. Every night this battle is fought, and every night the forces of order prevail, though never permanently, for Apophis regenerates and will attack again the following night.
In the twelfth hour, the barque passes through the body of a great serpent, and Ra emerges renewed, reborn as the young sun Khepri. He rises in the east once more, and the cycle begins again. Each dawn is not merely a new day but a cosmic victory, proof that order has triumphed over chaos once more. For the ancient Egyptians, the reliability of the sunrise was the greatest evidence of Ma'at, the cosmic order that held the universe together.
The chaos serpent Apophis tries to swallow Ra and prevent sunrise. Set, despite his negative role elsewhere, protects Ra by spearing Apophis. Each dawn represents Ra's victory over chaos.
This daily journey explains the sun's movement and represents the eternal battle between order and chaos.