No, the cobra is goddess Wadjet patron of Lower Egypt and the patron of Upper Egypt is the vulture goddess Nekhbet
Horus and Nekhbet (the vulture goddess of Al Kab), came to represent Upper Egypt, while Set and Wadjet (the cobra goddess of Buto) represented Lower Egypt.
Wadjet the patron goddess of all of Lower Egypt and 'twin' in the guardianship of Egypt with the vulture goddess Nekhbet. She was a protector of the pharoah.
The cobra represents the goddess Wadjet she was said to be the patron and protector of Lower Egypt The vulture represents the goddess Nekhbet who was the patron and protector of Upper Egypt The Holes in his ears are for earrings which were the fashion of the time The royal headcloth called "nemes". It is patterned with stripes of blue and gold. It also means that the mummy was a Pharaoh The Beard means that the mummy was male
Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt
The Goddess of Nekhbet is the Vulture Goddess of Egypt.
No, the cobra is goddess Wadjet patron of Lower Egypt and the patron of Upper Egypt is the vulture goddess Nekhbet
Horus and Nekhbet (the vulture goddess of Al Kab), came to represent Upper Egypt, while Set and Wadjet (the cobra goddess of Buto) represented Lower Egypt.
Hapi was thought to be the husband of the vulture goddess Nekhebet in Lower Egypt, and of the cobra goddess Uatchet (Uatch-Ura, Wadjet) in Upper Egypt. When he took on the attributes of Nun (Nu), Hapi became husband to Nun's wife, the primeval goddess Naunet of the Ogdoad
Wadjet the patron goddess of all of Lower Egypt and 'twin' in the guardianship of Egypt with the vulture goddess Nekhbet. She was a protector of the pharoah.
Sekhmet was a ancient Egpytian goddess of Upper Egypt.
Wadjet the patron goddess of all of Lower Egypt and 'twin' in the guardianship of Egypt with the vulture goddess Nekhbet. These two were the nebty (the 'two ladies') of the pharaoh and were an example of Egyptian duality - each of the two lands had to have its own patron goddess. Wadjet was the personification of the north/Upper Egypt. The living Uraeus she was a protector of the pharaoh, ready to strike and kill his enemies. She was also depicted as a woman-headed cobra, a winged cobra, a lion-headed woman, or a woman wearing the red crown of Lower Egypt.
The goddess Hathor was not resticted to one location; her cult center was at Dendera in Upper Egypt.
The cobra represents the goddess Wadjet she was said to be the patron and protector of Lower Egypt The vulture represents the goddess Nekhbet who was the patron and protector of Upper Egypt The Holes in his ears are for earrings which were the fashion of the time The royal headcloth called "nemes". It is patterned with stripes of blue and gold. It also means that the mummy was a Pharaoh The Beard means that the mummy was male
the answer is anubis
Nekhebet is the name of the Egyptian Vulture God Responsible For: Wild Birds, Creator Of Life, Death and Rebirth Totemic Form: Vulture Nekhebet was usually represented in Egyptian art as a vulture or a woman with the head of a vulture, but sometimes she was depicted as a woman wearing the white crown of Upper Egypt (southern Egypt). Nekhebet spent much time at the palace, where she suckled the royal children, including the pharaoh. When the pharaoh was grown, she accompanied him in battle, hovering over his head in the form of a vulture.
Sekhmet was a ancient Egpytian goddess of Upper Egypt, her cult center was at Memphis. She was the ancient Egpytian goddess of divine retribution, vengeance, and conquest.