The Old Ways
Horus, The Living Horus, Lord of the Sky, Divine Pharaoh, Avenger of His Father

Kemetic Tradition

Horus

HOR-us (Egyptian: Heru)

The falcon-headed Egyptian god of kingship and the sky, son of Osiris and Isis, who avenged his father's murder by Set and whose living form was embodied in every ruling pharaoh.

Horus (Egyptian Heru) is the falcon-headed god of the sky and kingship, son of Osiris and Isis, and the divine model for every pharaoh who ever ruled the Two Lands. The living king was Horus incarnate; the dead king became Osiris. This theological framework — the most durable political theology in the ancient world — bound together kingship, death, and resurrection into a single coherent system that endured for three thousand years.

The Eye of Horus

Among Horus’s most important mythological contributions is the Wedjat — the Eye of Horus, injured by Set in their cosmic conflict and healed by Thoth. The Pyramid Texts and Book of the Dead Chapter 112 preserve the mythology of this sacred eye, which became the primary amulet of protection and healing in Egyptian religion. When offerings were given to the gods, they were described as “the Eye of Horus” — giving the gods an aspect of divine wholeness. The lunar phases were understood as the waxing and waning of the healed and injured eye respectively.

Horus the Elder and Horus Son of Isis

Egyptian tradition distinguished at least two major forms of Horus. Heru-Ur (Horus the Elder) is a cosmic deity predating the Osirian narrative — a sky god who embodied the entire vault of heaven, his right eye the sun and his left the moon. Harsiese (Horus Son of Isis) is the child who grows in the papyrus marshes, hidden from Set, and eventually challenges his uncle for the throne of his father. The Legends of the Gods preserves the long and legally complex trial before the assembly of the gods — Ra initially favoring Set, the tribunal eventually awarding the throne to Horus after eighty years of dispute.

The royal theology

Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt by Breasted traces how the identification of the living pharaoh with Horus formed the bedrock of Egyptian political theology. The pharaoh’s Horus name — the first and oldest of his five royal names — declared him to be Horus made manifest. In death, the pharaoh merged with Osiris, and the new pharaoh ascended as the new Horus. This cycle was not merely symbolic; it was the mechanism by which cosmic order (Ma’at) was maintained in the political world.

Horus in practice

In Kemetic reconstructionism, Horus is invoked for protection, justice, and the assertion of legitimate authority. His symbol — the falcon or the Wedjat eye — is among the most recognizable of Egyptian sacred images. The Book of the Dead Chapter 112 is a useful meditation text on wholeness and healing. Horus is also a deity of overcoming adversity: his entire mythology is a story of a child who was supposed to have been eliminated, who survived, grew, and ultimately prevailed.

Related Terms