Hathor Silver Cuff
The Goddess Hathor was often depicted as a cow symbolising her maternal aspect, because she is seen as giving sustenance to her people; as the sky goddess aspect she was associated with the Milky Way. One of her most common forms was of a woman wearing a headdress of cow, horns and a sun disc. Hathor took on many forms throughout Egyptian history and was associated with different goddesses but was also seen as the feminine counterpart of the god Horus. Eventually she became the primeval goddess responsible for the origin of all other goddesses. Over the years the veneration of Hathor eventually shifted to the veneration of Isis, though the two goddesses are closely related. Hathor was the goddess of motherhood, love, joy, and fertility. She helped the soul to make a smooth transition into eternity,
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ISIS: The Egyptian Book of the Dead describes Isis as “She who gives birth to heaven and earth” She was instrumental in the resurrection of her husband Osiris and was believed to be his counterpart. When Osiris was murdered by Set she used her magical skills to restore his body back to life, after first gathering up all his body parts that had been strewn about the Earth by Set.
In the many temples erected in her honour she was served by both priests and priestesses who also had a reputation for wisdom and the healing arts and like her were said to possess special powers. She was known as the protector of the dead and was depicted as a winged Goddess or a Kite (one of her sacred animals). In this form her wings were said to spread a heavenly fragrance across the land and brought fresh air into the underworld.
Together with Thoth she taught mankind the secrets of medicine; she was a great enchantress, known for her magical healing powers. Isis was one of the earliest and most important goddesses in ancient Egypt and was associated with the star Sirius its appearance in the sky signified the beginning of a new year. Likewise Isis was considered the Goddess of rebirth and reincarnation, new beginnings and was often depicted holding and ankh and a lotus bud.
OUROBOROS- is an ancient symbol depicting a serpent or Dragon swallowing its own tail, it symbolises something that is constantly re creating itself, the idea of primordial unity. It first originated in ancient Egypt and was an important symbol used in religious and mythological symbolism, but has also been frequently used in alchemical illustrations associated with Gnosticism and Hermeticism.