Khonsu
Also spelled as:
Khonshu/Khensu/Chons/Chonsu
Picture: Black and red granite statue of Khonsu
with the features ofTutankhamun. The sidelock of youth and
the curved divinebeard are both characteristic of the
god's iconography.Egyptian Museum. Cairo.
Mythology of Khonsu
The god Khonsu was a moon god whose earliest
attested character is considerably different from his later
manifestation in New Kingdom Thebes where he appears as the
benign son of Amun and Mut. In the Pyramid Texts he appears
in the famous 'Cannibal Hymn' as a bloodthirsty deity who
assists the deceased king in catching and slaying those
Egyptian gods that the king 'feeds upon' in order to absorb
their strength (PT 402). Later the god appears to have been
associated with childbirth, but it is in his role as an
integral member of the all-powerful Theban triad (Amun, Mut,
Khonsu) that Khonsu is best known. There Khonsu was
primarily viewed as a lunar god, but he exhibited several
different aspects, appearing among other forms as Khonsu
pa-khered (Khonsu the Child); Khonsu pa-ir-sekher (Khonsu
the provider) (the Chespisichis of the Greeks); Khonsu
heseb-ahau (Khons, decider of the life span); and Khonsu
em-waset nefer-hetep (Khonsu in Thebes) - apparently the
most important Theban manifestation of the god. The varius
forms of the god interacted with one another as can be seen
from the inscription known as theBentresh Stela - inscribed
in Thebes in the 4th century BC but purporting to record a
pronouncement of Rmaesses II some 800 years earlier. The
stela tells how the Egyptian king loaned a statue of Khonsu
pa-ir-sekher to the king of Bakhtan to aid in the healing of
hid daughter, Bentresh, and includes discourse between this
form of Khonsu and the more senior Khonsu in Thebes.
Although firmly associated with Amun and Mut at Thebes, at
Kom Ombo Khonsu was regarded as the son of Sobek and Hathor,
and at Edfu Temple Khonsu was linked to Osiris as 'the son
of the leg', referring to the relic of the netherworld god
said to be preserved at that site. As a moon god Khonsu was
also sometimes associated with Shu, god of the air, and with
Horus. Like Thoth, he participated in the reckoning of time
and was believed to influence the gestation of both humans
and animals. In the past the name of Khonsu was thought to
be derived from theelements kh 'placenta' and senu 'king' as
a personification of the royal placenta, but it is now
generally believed to be based on the verb 'khenes' (to
cross over) or (to traverse), meaning (he who traverses the
sky).
Picture: Khonsu in his falcon-headed form
with characteristicattributes of disk and crescent moon.
20th Dynasty.Tomb of Montuherkhepeshef.Valley of the Kings.
Western Thebes.
Iconography of Khonsu
Khonsu is usually depicted in anthropomorphic
form - most often as a young man enveloped in mummy bandages
or a tightly fitting garment, though his arms may be
partially or completely unrestrained. He frequently wears
his lunar symbol consisting of the full lunar disk resting
in a crescent new moon upon his head; in his role as divine
child of Amun and Mut he commonly wears the sidelock of
youth, though he may also wear the curved beard of the
Egyptian gods. The god was often depicted holding the crook
and flail associated with Osiris and Horus, and a was or
djed-headed staff, but his most distinctive attributive
attribute is usually the necklace he wears with its
crescent-shaped pectoral element resting on his chest and
its heavy counterpoise on his back. This counterpoise is
usually depicted in an inverted 'keyhole' shape and can be
used to differentiate the god from representations of the
god Ptah whose necklace counterpoise is of a different
shape. As a sky deity Khonsu can also be depicted with the
head of a falcon - usually differentiated from Horus and Ra
by the lunar disk and crescent. As a lunar deity one of his
symbols was the Cynocephabus baboon, though Khonsu himself
does not appear in this form as frequently as does the god
Thoth. Small amulets representing Khonsu in human form are
known from the later dynasties, as are plaques depicting the
god in fully human or falcon-headed form, sometimes with his
divine parents Amun and Mut, or like Horus, standing on the
back of a crocodile on the healing plaques known as
cippi.
Worship of Khonsu
Khonsu had many sactuaries throughout Egypt, but
his main cult center was Thebes. Begun in the 20th Dynasty
by Ramesses III and completed by a number of later rulers,
the temple of khonsu was erected within the precincts of the
great Amun temple at Karnak. In certain of his festivals -
such as the New Year's festival at the temple of Luxor where
the god participated in the celebrations with his parents,
Amun and Mut- the cult statue of Khonsu was transported from
his precinct at Karnak on a sacred barque which was
identified by a falcon's head at its prow and stern. The god
processed along his own statue-lined avenue running from his
temple to Luxor indicating his importance in this and other
festivals. Khonsu's fame as a god of healing was also
widespread and enhanced in later times by the fact that he
was believed to have personally helaed one of Egypt's kings,
Ptolemy IV, who called himself 'beloved of Khonsu who
protects the king and drives away evil spirits'.
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