Qebui
deity sky Egyptian single tradition · 3
Qebui is the god of the north wind in Egyptian mythology. He appears in art as a man with four ram heads or as a winged ram with four heads.
↻ synthesized from 3 sources
When
- First attested
- 3000 BCE
- Attested period
- -3000 – -30
- Historical notes
- Ancient Egyptian deity associated with directional winds.
Relationships
- co occurs with
- Shehbui, Khenti-kheti, Petbe, Rem, Rekhyt, Sepa, Maga, Imsety, Kemwer, Khenti-Amentiu, Khesfu, Kneph, Mau, Nefer Hor, Nekheny, Pataikos, Sahekek, Sebeg, Sed, Sekhemus, Sepes, Septu, Seta-Ta, Setcheh, Setem, Sed, Amun, Shu, Henkhisesui, Ḥutchai, Mandulis, Sebiumeker, Serapis, Resheph, Nemty, Neferhotep, Jupiter Ammon, Kherty, Medjed, Nehebkau, Qebehsenuef, Ihy, Panebtawy, Ra-Horakhty, Kothar-wa-Khasis, Mehen, Shepsy, Iah, Shezmu, Nebnerou, Peteese, Pihor, Ruty, Shemanefer, Mnevis, Sah, Kolanthes, Irer, Sedjem, Igai
Mentioned by
- Amun
- Shu
- Henkhisesui
- Ḥutchai
- Mandulis
- Sebiumeker
- Serapis
- Resheph
- Nemty
- Neferhotep
- Jupiter Ammon
- Kherty
- Medjed
- Nehebkau
- Qebehsenuef
- Ihy
and 18 more
Sources
Source passages
“Qebui, god of the north wind who appears as a man with four ram heads or a winged ram with four heads.”
#24199 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5
“Qebui – God of the north winds”
#24898 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5