FACTOID # 17: Senior gentlemen might consider a trip to Russia, where there are two women over 65 for every man.
 
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Encyclopedia > Upuaut
Wepwawet in hieroglyphs

In Egyptian mythology, Wepwawet ("opener of the ways"; also Upuaut, Wep-wawet, Ophois), the son of Isis, is a jackal-god of death and war, worshipped especially in Asyut (Siut). He was supposed to have opened the ways for the armies of the Pharaohs as well as the spirits of the dead. He is depicted on the shedshed, a standard that led armies to battle. Wepwawet originated in Upper Egypt, but symbolizes the unity of Upper and Lower Egypt. Wepwawet is sometimes identified with Anubis.


Originally, Osiris was the god of death, the cemetery and the underworld, but with the rise of the 12th Dynasty he was limited to the underworld and Wepwawet took over his duties as funerary god.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Hammonds, Mark (4079 words)
UPUAUT was fitted with a camera and placed into one of the "ventilation" shafts in the King's Chamber.
UPUAUT 2's camera beamed back a tantalizing image of a crack at the bottom of the probable sliding door showing that something was on the other side.
UPUAUT 2 indicated that the two shafts in the Queen's Chamber were aligned to the stars Sirius and one of the stars of Ursa Minor (The Little Dipper).
Carte Blanche (1143 words)
Upuaut 2 might not be your most attractive robot, but its power and strength belies its size.
While Upuaut was designed to go over sand and small stones, the sudden cracks in its path spell trouble.
Upuaut 2 has been stopped in its tracks by a strange little door, 60 metres up the shaft.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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