Nuit

deity sky Egyptian single tradition · 5

Nuit is juxtaposed with Hadit in The Book of the Law, where Hadit represents each unique point-experience. These point-experiences in aggregate comprise the sum of all possible experience, Nuith.

↻ synthesized from 5 sources

When

First attested
3000 BCE
Attested period
1904 – 2020
Historical notes
Appears in Aleister Crowley's Liber AL; quotations from her chapter included in The Blue Equinox (1919).

Relationships

syncretized with
Goddess, Nut
consort of
Hadit

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

Source passages

“When juxtaposed with Nuit in The Book of the Law, Hadit represents each unique point-experience. These point-experiences in aggregate comprise the sum of all possible experience, Nuith.”

#16632 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“material paraphrased from works by Aleister Crowley, primarily from Liber AL (The Book of the Law, particularly from Ch 1, spoken by Nuit, the Star Goddess)”

#19675 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5

“Nuit, also known as "Lady of the Starry Heaven".”

#20724 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“He is associated with the other two major Thelemic deities found in The Book of the Law, Nuit and Hadit. Adherents believe the Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu, known within Thelema as the "Stele of Revealing", links Nuit, Hadit, and Ra-Hoor-Khuit”

#41570 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“According to Crowley, the stele depicts the three chief deities of Thelema: Nuit (Egyptian Nut), Hadit (Egyptian Behdety), and Ra-Hoor-Khuit (Egyptian Re-Harakhty ["Re-Horus of the Two Horizons"]).”

#41775 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001