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Isis is the name of a place in Queensland (see Ipswich, Australia) and also the name of the Thames in Oxford.
Isis (Greek version; Egyptian is Aset) is the goddess of motherhood and fertility in ancient Egypt. She is a life-death-rebirth deity (see Legend of Osiris and Isis), as well as one of the
Ennead. Later, she acquired the goddess Sopdet.
Originally, she was a goddess of royalty (her hieroglyph includes the word
for "throne"). Later, during the period of Greek dominance, she was the patron goddess
of sailors.
She was a close companion of Arensnuphis.
Isis was the daughter of Nuit, goddess of the sky, and Seb, god of earth. She married Osiris, her brother and the father of her son Horus. Osiris was murdered by
Seth but she reassembled his body (leading to her association with the underworld and the funerary cult), impregnated herself with his body and
gave birth to Horus in Khemnis, a swamp. In addition to Horus, Isis was the mother of Min
(alternatively, they were lovers).
Isis, with her sister Nephthys, can be seen on the sides of coffins in human
form, their wings outstreched protecting the dead. The sisters also had magical powers.
Isis helped her husband, killed by Seth, to come back to life and rule in
the land of the dead.
Isis is often symbolised by a cow, or a cow's head or horns (illustrating a connection with Hathor). In art, she was depicted with her son, Horus, with a crown and a vulture, and sometimes as a kite flying above Osiris'
body.
Alternatively, Isis was identified as the scorpion goddess Serq or Selk.
The cult of Isis rose to prominence in the Hellenistic world beginning in the
last centuries BCE, until it was eventually banned by the Christians in the
sixth century CE. Despite the Isis mystery cult's growing popularity, there is evidence to suggest that the Isis mysteries were
not altogether welcomed by the ruling classes in Rome. Her rites were considered by the
princeps Augustus to be
"pornographic" and capable of destroying the Roman moral fibre. It is not surprising, therefore, that part of Augustus' programme
for reconstruction after the fall of the Roman Republic was an attempt
to infuse new life into the old gods of Rome. Tacitus writes that after Julius Caesar's assassination, a temple in honour of Isis
had been decreed; Augustus suspended this, and tried to turn Romans back to the Roman gods who were closely associated with the
state. Eventually the Roman emperor Gaius abandoned the Augustan wariness towards Oriental cults, and it was in his reign that
the Isiac festival was established in Rome. According to Josephus, Gaius himself donned female garb and took part in the
mysteries he instituted, and Isis acquired in the Hellenistic age a "new rank as a leading goddess of the Mediterranean
world."
Roman perspectives on cult were syncretic, seeing in a new deity merely
local aspects of a familiar one. For many Romans, Egyptian Isis was an aspect of Phrygian Cybele, whose orgiastic rites were long naturalized at Rome. In the Golden Ass (1st Century CE), Apuleius' goddess Isis is identified with the Phrygian Cybele:
- "Behold, Lucius, I have arrived. Thy weeping and prayers have moved me to succour thee. I am she that is the natural mother
of all things, the Mistress and Governess of all the Elements, the initial Progenitrix of all things, the Chief of powers divine,
Queen of Heaven, the First of the Gods celestial, the light of the Goddesses. At my will, the planets of the air, the wholesome
winds of the Seas, and the silences of hell are disposed; my name, my divinity is adored throughout all the world in various
manners, in various customs and in many names, for the Phrygians call me the Mother of the
Gods...' (The Golden Ass)
Among these names of Roman Isis, 'Queen of Heaven' is outstanding
for its long and continuous history.
Some scholars argue that aspects of Isis worship have influenced the practices of some Christians in regards to the Virgin Mary.
There has recently been a revival of Isis worship among neo-pagans and feminists who are attracted by the matriarchal notions of goddess
worship.
External Links
Modern worship
Ancient worship
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