
Human identity[]
【N/A for now】
Goddess identity[]
Isis is the queen of heaven and earth in Egyptian mythology, as well as the queen of gods, the goddess of the moon, the goddess of royal power, magic, marriage, war, health and Sirius. She is the guardian of children, married women and pharaohs.
Character background
Isis is one of the nine gods of the Heliopolis clan in Egypt. She is revered by the Egyptian gods as a powerful one and the first among the goddesses. She is the ruler of the sky and the queen of the earth. All gods are under her rule.
Isis is the sister of Osiris, the god of the underworld. She is the daughter of Geb, the goddess of earth and fertility, and Nut, the goddess of the sky. In addition to Osiris, she has two goddess sisters, Set and Nephthys.
Isis and her sister Osiris, the goddess of the underworld and harvest, gave birth to Horus, the goddess of the sky and kingship. Before Horus was born, this goddess with powerful magic designed to bite Ra with her early venomous snake to obtain the power of Ra, the goddess of creation, and tried to pass her power to her unborn daughter Horus.
The goddess Isis was closely associated with magic, motherhood, and love. The humanoid Isis wore a long skirt and sometimes held a fork bell. The hieroglyphic symbol for the throne above her head was her name, which can be translated as "seat" or "throne", highlighting her importance to the kingship. Because of her close relationship with Hathor, the ancient Egyptians sometimes depicted her in a similar way: with horns and a sun disk on her head. In rare cases, Isis was depicted as an upright cobra, as in the Book of the Gates of the New Kingdom.
In the Komet Heliopolis polytheism, mourners played the roles of Isis and her sister Nephthys in funeral rites; in the afterlife, Isis was believed to provide assistance to the dead. The Egyptians also associated Isis with the star Sirius, whose annual disappearance and reappearance marked the beginning of the Nile flooding and the subsequent harvest season.
From the time of the Ptolemaic period, the cult of Isis spread throughout the Mediterranean world, leading to her being confused with other famous goddesses, so that she became known as "the one with many names". She was praised for her healing powers and was regarded as a compassionate mother goddess. As the cult of Isis developed, Horus became associated with the Greek goddess Apollo and began to symbolize the victory of good over evil.
Isis is also the goddess of the universe. She is the eye of Ra. According to Plutarch, Isis is also the goddess of the moon. This goddess is also regarded by the Egyptians as the goddess of Sirius. Sometimes she is also called the goddess Isis-Sotis. According to the temple hymns of Philae in Egypt, this goddess created the heavens, the underworld and the human world at the peak.
The myths of the Komet Order record that the goddess Isis separated the sky and the earth, pointed out the way of the stars and divided the trajectory of the sun and the moon.
This goddess was widely worshipped in Rome and Persia. Her temples covered almost the entire territory of Rome and Persia. The most famous temple is the Temple of Philae in Aswan.
Role image
She appears as a busty beauty with beautiful yellow eyes, long black hair and bronze skin. She wears an Egyptian queen dress with half a cup, exposed armpits and belly, with platinum as the main color, a small double feather crown headdress, and golden Greek-style strappy sandals. The goddess always carries a scepter-shaped long-handled magic staff decorated with an ankh, the Eye of Ra, lotus and red crystal, and appears with animals such as cobras, vultures, and scorpions.