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Image © Mark T. Rigby
 
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Shu (Su) was the god of dry air, wind and the
atmosphere. He was also related to the sun, possibly as an
aspect of sunlight. He was the son of the creator god, father
of the twin sky and the earth deities and the one who held the
sky off of the earth. He was one of the gods who protected Ra
on his journey through the underworld, using magic spells to
ward off Ra's enemy,
the snake-demon Apep.
As with other protector gods, he had a darker side - he was
also a god of punishment in the land of the dead, leading
executioners and torturers to kill off the corrupt souls.
His name might be derived from the word for dryness -
shu, the root of words such as 'dry', 'parched',
'withered', 'sunlight' and 'empty'. His name could also mean
'He who Rises Up'.
He was generally depicted as a man wearing an ostrich
feather headdress, holding a sceptre and the ankh
sign of life. Sometimes he is shown wearing the sun disk on
his head, linking him to the sun. Occasionally, when shown
with his sister-wife Tefnut,
he is shown in lion form and the two were known as the
"twin lion gods". At other times, he was shown with
the hind part of a lion as his headdress, linking him to his
leonine form. Mostly, he was shown with his arms raised,
holding up the goddess Nut
as the sky, standing on the body of Geb.
One story says that Shu and Tefnut went to explore the
waters of Nun.
After some time, Ra believed that they were lost, and sent the
his Eye out into the chaos to find them. When his children
were returned to him, Ra wept, and his tears were believed to
have turned into the first humans.
Shu was created by asexually
or by spitting, the first born of the sun god. He seems to be
more of a personification of the atmosphere rather than an
actual god.
That is my daughter, the living female one, Tefnut,
who shall be with her brother Shu.
Life is his name, Order is her name.
[At first] I lived with my two children, my little ones,
the one before me, the other behind me.
Life reposed with my daughter Order,
the one within me, the other without me.
I rose over them, but their arms were around me.
-- Spell 80, Coffin Texts
As a god of the wind, the people invoked him to give good
wind to the sails of the boats. It was he who was the
personification of the cold northern winds; he was the breath
of life - the vital principle of all living things. His bones
were thought to be clouds. He was also called to 'lift up' the
spirits of the dead so that they might rise up to the heavens,
known as the 'light land', reached by means of a giant
'ladder' that Shu was thought to hold up.
...Shu, the 'space', the light
cavity in the midst of the primordial darkness. Shu is both
light and air, and as the offspring of god he is manifest
life. As light he separates the earth from the sky and as air
he upholds the sky vault.
-- Myth and Symbol in Ancient
Egypt, R. T. Rundle Clark
Despite
being a god of sunlight, Shu was not considered to be a solar
deity. He was, though, connected to the sun god as one who was
thought to bring Ra (and the pharaoh) to life each morning,
raising the sun into the sky. During his travels through the
underworld, he protected Ra from the snake-demon Apep, with
spells to counteract the serpent and his followers. He
participated in the judgement of the deceased in the Halls
of Ma'ati as the leader of aggressive, punishing beings
who were to eliminate the ones not worthy of the afterlife.
THE CHAPTER OF NOT PERISHING AND
OF BEING ALIVE IN KHERT-NETER. Saith Osiris Ani: "Hail,
children of: Shu! Hail, children of Shu, [children of] the
place of the dawn, who as the children of light have gained
possession of his crown. May I rise up and may I fare forth
like Osiris."
THE CHAPTER OF NOT GOING IN TO THE
BLOCK. Saith Osiris Ani: "The four bones of my neck and
of my back are joined together for me in heaven by Ra, the
guardian of the earth. This was granted on the day when my
rising up out of weakness upon my two feet was ordered, on the
day when the hair was cut off. The bones of my neck and of my
back have been joined together by Set
and by the company of the gods, even as they were in the time
that is past; may nothing happen to break them apart. Make ye
[me] strong against my father's murderer. I have gotten power
over the two earths. Nut
hath joined together my bones, and [I] behold [them] as they
were in the time that is past [and I] see [them] even in the
same order as they were [when] the gods had not come into
being in visible forms. I am Penti, I, Osiris the scribe Ani,
triumphant, am the heir of the great gods."
-- The
Book of the Dead, Chapters XLVI and XL
He also was believed to hold up Nut,
the sky goddess and his daughter, above his son the earth god Geb.
Without Shu holding the two apart, the Egyptians believed that
there would be no area in which to create the life they saw
all around them. The Egyptians believed that there were also
pillars to help Shu lift up the sky - these pillars were on
the four cardinal points, and were known as the 'Pillars of
Shu'.
Shu hath raised thee up, O
Beautiful Face, thou governor of eternity. Thou hast thine
eye, O scribe Nebseni, lord of fealty, and it is beautiful.
Thy right eye is like the Sektet Boat, thy left eye is like
the Atet Boat. Thine eyebrows are fair to see in the presence
of the Company of the Gods.
-- The Speech of Anubis (from
the Papyrus of Nebseni)
The Egyptians believed that Shu was the second divine
pharaoh, ruling after Ra. Apep's followers, though, plotted
against him and attacked the god at his palace in At Nub.
Despite defeating them, Shu became diseased due to their
corruption, and soon even Shu's own followers revolted against
him. Shu then abdicated the throne, allowing his son Geb
to rule, and Shu himself returned to the skies.
I am Shu. I draw air from the
presence of the Light-god, from the uttermost limits of
heaven, from the uttermost limits of earth, from the uttermost
limits of the pinion of Nebeh bird. May air be given unto this
young divine Babe. [My mouth is open, I see with my eyes.]
-- The Chapter of Giving Air in
Khert-Neter (From The
Book of the Dead)
There are no known temples to Shu, but despite Akenaten's
distaste for the gods of Egypt, he and Nefertiti used Tefnut
and Shu for political purposes. They depicted themselves as
the twin gods in an apparent attempt to elevate their status
to that of being a living god and goddess, the son and
daughter of the creator, on earth. Akenaten, not the
monotheist that most believe him to be, put out the belief
that Shu lived in the sun disk. At Iunet (Dendera),
though, there was a part of the city known as "The House
of Shu" (   
) and at Djeba (Utes-Hor, Behde, Edfu)
there was a place known as "The Seat of Shu" (    ).
He was worshiped in connection with the Ennead at Iunu, and in
his lion form at Nay-ta-hut (Leontopolis).
Shu was the husband of his twin, the goddess Tefnut,
son of the sun god Atem-Ra and father to the earth god Geb
and the sky goddess Nut.
As such, he was one of the gods of the Ennead. Shu was
identified with the Meroitic god Arensnuphis, known as
Shu-Arensnuphis. He was also identified with the war god
Onuris, known as Onuris-Shu. His links with Onuris are
probably because the two gods had wives who took the form of a
lioness (Mehit was the wife of Onuris), and both gods were
thought to have brought their consorts back from Nubia. In
Shu's case, when Tefnut
went off in anger to Nubia,
Ra sent both him and Thoth
to get her, and they found her in Begum. Thoth began at once
to try and persuade her to return to Egypt. In the end Tefnut
(with Shu and Thoth
leading her) made a triumphant entry back into Egypt,
accompanied by a host of Nubian musicians, dancers and
baboons.
Egypt's second divine ruler, Shu was one of the great
Ennead. A god of the wind, the atmosphere, the space between
the sky and the earth, Shu was the division between day and
night, the underworld and the living world. He was a god
related to living, allowing life to flourish in Egypt with his
breath of life. He was the bridge between life and death, both
a protector and a punisher in the afterlife. To the Egyptians,
if there was no Shu, there would be no life - Egypt existed
thanks to Shu.
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