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Throughout the world in ancient times, man worshipped the sun.
We find monuments to the sun gods all over the world, but in
Egypt we really begin to get a feel for just how the sun
dominated early theology. In Egypt, at various locations and
apparently somewhat independently, the worship of the sun
developed with gods of various names. So many of Egypt's
deities were associated with the sun in some way that it is
difficult to identify them, and their various forms became
very complex. Montu, who we generally identify as an ancient
war god in Egypt, actually originated in the form of a local
solar god in Upper (southern) Egypt, apparently at Hermonthis
(City of the Sun). His worship seems to have been exported to Thebes
during the 11th
Dynasty.
Because of this god's association with the successful King
Nebhepetre Montuhotep I (or II, same king), who ruled
during Egypt's 11th Dynasty, Montu (Mentu) achieved the rank
of state god. Montuhotep I reunited Upper and Lower Egypt
after the chaos of the First Intermediate Period. His
association with Montu is obvious from his name, which means,
"Montu is satisfied".
However, by the 12th Dynasty, Montu became subordinated to Amun,
another deity who probably originated in Upper Egypt, and
would later be known as the "King of Gods". It was
during this period that Montu's role in Egyptian religion took
on the true attributes of a war god.
Actually, Montu's veneration as a war god can be traced
originally to the Story of Sinuhe, where Montu was praised by
the tale's hero after he defeated the "strong man"
of Retjenu. By the New Kingdom, 18th
Dynasty pharaohs, some of whom followed a very military
tradition, sought specifically to emulate Montu. For example,
the Gebel Barkal Stele of Tuthmosis
III, often referred to as the Napoleon of Egypt, describes
the king as "a valiant Montu on the battlefield".
Later in the New Kingdom, he became so personally identified
with the Ramesses
II that a cult statue bearing the king's throne name,
Usermaare Setepenre, with the epithet, "Montu in the Two
Lands", was venerated in Ramesses II's honor during his
lifetime. When kings such as Ramesses II are referenced as
"mighty bulls", they are claiming the association
with Montu as his son.
It should also be noted that Montu had a connection with
Egyptian households and was probably considered a protector of
the happy home. He was often cited in marriage
documents. One
document from Deir
el-Medina invokes the rage of a husband to his unfaithful
wife with, "It is the abomination of Montu!"
Left: The Temple of Karnak, Sanctuary of
Montu
Montu was honored with cult centers in a number of
locations. Specifically, he was worshipped at four sites
within the Theban region. The cult centers included Armant
(ancient Greek Hermonthis), southwest of modern Luxor
(ancient Thebes)
on the west bank of the Nile,
Medamud (ancient Madu) northeast of Luxor, Tod
(ancient Greek Tuphium), southwest of Luxor on the eastern
bank, and at Karnak
which is just northeast of modern Luxor. Most of these cult
centers appear to have been established during the Middle
Kingdom, with the exception of Karnak. There, the earliest
monument dates from the New Kingdom, and specifically to the
reign of Amenhotep
III.
A hymn from an Armant Stele says of him, "the raging
one who prevails over the serpent-demon Nik," and the one
"who causes Re to sail in his park and who overthrows his
serpent enemy". Therefore, it is perhaps not surprising
that the ancient Egyptian warships were
equipped with figures
of a striding Montu holding maces or spears. Each of these
statues were styled as a god of one of his four primary cult
centers.
Right: The Remains of the Temple of Montu
at Medamud
Montu is commonly depicted as a man with the head of a
falcon surmounted by a solar disk. He wears the double uraeus
behind which two tall plumes extend vertically. Later, he
became associated with the Bull
Cults such as Buchis at Armant, and so he is depicted with
the head of a bull and a plumed, solar headdress. Another bull
sacred to Montu was also worshipped at Medamud.
Like a number of other deities, Montu also became
associated with Re in the form of Montu-Re. He was also paired
with the solar Atum
of Lower Egypt, and in this guise, was often depicted
escorting the king into the presence of Amun. Other
documentary evidence
suggests that he was also sometimes
paired with Set
(Seth), perhaps acting as a controlled divine aggressor to
balance Set's chaotic attributes.
Left: Columns of different types at the
Ptolemy VII temple of Montu at Medamud
Montu is also sometimes accompanied by one of his consorts
in ancient scenes. Three are known, consisting of Tjenenet,
Iunyt and Rettawy ( or Raettawy). Rettawy is the female
counterpart of Re, and is depicted like Hathor
as a cow with a sun disk surmounting her head. Through Rettawy,
Montu is connected with Horus
and thus the king, for their son was Harpocrates (Horus the
child).
Montu's worship survived for many years, and he was
eventually considered by the Greeks to be a form of their war
god, Ares.
References:
| Title |
Author |
Date |
Publisher |
Reference Number |
|
Ancient Gods Speak, The: A Guide to Egyptian Religion |
Redford, Donald B. |
2002 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-515401-0 |
|
Atlas of Ancient Egypt |
Baines, John; Malek, Jaromir |
1980 |
Les Livres De France |
None Stated |
|
Egyptian Religion |
Morenz, Siegfried |
1973 |
Cornell University Press |
ISBN 0-8014-8029-9 |
|
Gods of the Egyptians, The (Studies in Egyptian Mythology) |
Budge, E. A. Wallis |
1969 |
Dover Publications, Inc. |
ISBN 486-22056-7 |
|
History of Ancient Egypt, A |
Grimal, Nicolas |
1988 |
Blackwell |
None Stated |
|
Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian |
2000 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-815034-2 |
|
Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity, The |
McManners, John |
1992 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-285259-0 |
|
Valley of the Kings |
Weeks, Kent R. |
2001 |
Friedman/Fairfax |
ISBN 1-5866-3295-7 |
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