Ra was only one of the creator gods, others included Thoth and Ptah.
yes because the egyptians think that Ra was the creator of all things
Ra was the Sun God of Ancient Egypt, creator of all. He is often depicted as a man with the head of a falcon.
Ra and Amun are the big gods in Egyptian mythology. Ra is the sun god and Amun is the creator of all things.
"Ra" is a reference to the ancient Egyptian sun god. Ra was believed to be the creator of all life, and was associated with power, strength, and light. Worship of Ra was an important aspect of ancient Egyptian religion.
"Ra" was the Egyptian sun god. He was also the creator god.
Neith was thought to be the water from which Ra was born, becoming the mother of Ra and thus of the gods themselves. Eventually she became the creatrix, the great creator, who was neither male nor female, but a combination of both. She was 'Everything that has been, that which is, and everything that will be', the female creator god of Egypt.
Amun-Ra was considered to be the creator of man and all other Egyptian gods.
Ra, or Re was the sun god of ancient Egypt, depicted with a human body and the head of a hawk. He was thought to be the creator and controller of the universe,
It varies as there were many stories in ancinet Egypt about how man came to be. Khenmu: the creator of people. He sculpted them out of clay from the Nile, held them up so that Ra could shine his life-giving rays upon them, and then placed them in the womb. Heqet assisted him in this. It was believed that Ra wept, and from the tears he wept came man. Ptah, a creator god of the universe by thought and word.
The card you are thinking. The fusion between "Slifer the Sky Dragon", "Winged Dragon of Ra", and "Obelisk the Tormentor" is called "The Creator of light, Horakhty".
Ra first appeared as a god associated with the sun in ancient Egyptian mythology. He was often depicted as a man with the head of a hawk and a sun disk on top of his head. Ra was considered the supreme deity and creator of the world in ancient Egyptian religion.