- Kebechet
In
Egyptian mythology , Kebechet (spelt in hieroglyphs as Qeb-Hwt, and also transliterated as Kebhut, Kebehut, Qébéhout, and Kabechet) was the deification of embalming liquid, her name meaning "cooling water". Such liquid was seen as the "child" ofAnubis , in the area where Kebechet was considered to exist, and consequently Kebechet was seen as his daughter.As the deification of embalming, she was seen as the
goddess of freshness and purification viawater . Like all female concepts from theOgdoad belief system, Kebechet was depicted as asnake with a body of stars, or simply as a woman with the head of a snake, although in rare instances she was pictured as anostrich , which was representative ofMa'at (purity / righteousness).It is also said that she was the daughter of Anubis the god of mummification and it is said that Kebechet helped purify the mummies for Anubis.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.