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Bastet (mythology) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bastet

Bastet was a goddess in ancient Egyptian religion, worshiped as early as the Second Dynasty (2890 BC). As Bast, she was the goddess of warfare in Lower Egypt, the Nile River delta region, before the unification of the cultures of ancient Egypt. Her name is also spelled Baast, Ubaste, and Baset.〔Badawi, Cherine. ''Footprint Egypt''. Footprint Travel Guides, 2004.〕
The two uniting cultures had deities that shared similar roles and usually the same imagery. In Upper Egypt, Sekhmet was the parallel warrior lioness deity to Bast. Often similar deities merged into one with the unification, but that did not occur with these deities with such strong roots in their cultures. Instead, these goddesses began to diverge. During the Twenty-Second Dynasty (c. 945–715 BC), Bast had changed from a lioness warrior deity into a major protector deity represented as a cat.〔Serpell, "Domestication and History of the Cat", p. 184.〕 Bastet, the name associated with this later identity, is the name commonly used by scholars today to refer to this deity.
==Name==
Bastet, the form of the name which is most commonly adopted by Egyptologists today because of its use in later dynasties, is a modern convention offering one possible reconstruction. In early Egyptian, her name appears to have been ''bꜣstt''. In Egyptian writing, the second ''t'' marks a feminine ending, but was not usually pronounced, and the aleph ''ꜣ'' (10px) may have moved to a position before the accented syllable, ''ꜣbst''.〔Te Velde, "Bastet", p. 165.〕 By the first millennium, then, ''bꜣstt'' would have been something like
*Ubaste (<
*Ubastat) in Egyptian speech, later becoming Coptic ''Oubaste''.〔
During later dynasties, Bast was assigned a lesser role in the pantheon bearing the name Bastet, but remained. Thebes became the capital of Ancient Egypt during the 18th Dynasty. As they rose to great power the priests of the temple of Amun, dedicated to the primary local deity, advanced the stature of their titular deity to national prominence and shifted the relative stature of others in the Egyptian pantheon. Diminishing her status, they began referring to Bast with the added suffix, as "Bastet" and their use of the new name was well-documented, becoming very familiar to researchers. By the 22nd dynasty the transition had occurred in all regions.
The town of Bast's cult (see below) was known in Greek as ''Boubastis'' (Βούβαστις). The Hebrew rendering of the name for this town is ''Pî-beset'' ("House of Bastet"), spelled without ''Vortonsilbe''.〔
What the name of the goddess means remains uncertain.〔 One recent suggestion by Stephen Quirke (''Ancient Egyptian Religion'') explains it as meaning "She of the ointment jar". This ties in with the observation that her name was written with the hieroglyph "ointment jar" (''bꜣs'') and that she was associated with protective ointments, among other things.〔 Also compare the name 英語:alabaster which might, through Greek, come from the name of the goddess.
She was the goddess of protection against contagious diseases and evil spirits.〔http://www.shira.net/egypt-goddess.htm#Bastet〕
She is also known as The Eye of Ra.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bastet」の詳細全文を読む



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