Paa Uatch-Ura -"The Great Green Water" |
|
prt
m hrw
|
| "What then is it? "Million of years" [is] the name of the one, "Uat-Ura (Green Lake)" [is] the name of the other; a pool is is of hesmen (naton) and a pool it is of Maaaat (nitre); otherwise said, "Traverser of millions of years" [is] the name of the one, "Uat-Ura (Green Lake)" [is] the name of the other; otherwise said, "Begetter of millions of years" [is] the name of the one, "Green Lake" [is] the name of the other." |
|
In Egyptian mythology, Huh (also Heh, Hah, Hauh) was
the deification of eternity in the Ogdoad, his name itself
meaning endlessness. As a concept, he was androgynous, his female form being known as Hauhet, which is simply the feminine form of his name. Like the other concepts in the Ogdoad, his male form was often depicted as a frog, or a frog-headed human, and his female form as a snake or snake-headed human. The other common representation depicts him crouching, holding a palm stem in each hand (or just one), sometimes with a palm stem in his hair, as palm stems represented long life to the Egyptians, the years being represented by notches on it. Depictions of this form also had a shen ring at the base of each palm stem, which represented infinity. Depictions of Huh were also used in hieroglyphs to represent one million, which was essentially considered equivalent to infinity in Egyptian mathematics. Thus this deity is also known as the 'god of millions of years. |
|
|
|
Rev 22:1 "And he shewed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb." |
![]() |
