Aati

deity underworld Book of the Dead single tradition · 2

Aati, also called Ati, meaning "a leper", was an Egyptian god and one of the 42 judges of the dead. The god will question the sins of a soul traveling through the underworld. The soul of the dead was supposed to deny the accusation by responding with the line: "O Aati who comes from Heliopolis, I have not foolishly set my mouth in motion against another man."

↻ synthesized from 2 sources

When

First attested
1550 BCE
Attested period
-1550 – -50
Historical notes
Name found on the Papyrus of Nebsemy, a copy of the Book of the Dead.

Relationships

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Sources

wikipedia (2)

Source passages

“Aati, also called Ati, meaning "a leper", was an Egyptian god and one of the 42 judges of the dead. Aati comes from Heliopolis. The god will question the sins of a soul traveling through the underworld.”

#15051 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“Aati – One of the Assessors of Maat”

#24806 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5