Nut
Goddess of the firmament, Nut envelops the Earth with her star-studded body. She is the mother who welcomes and regenerates, the womb of the cosmos. Beneath her vault, every soul remembers where it comes from.

Nut is the Goddess of the Sky, the Mother who gives life each day and who each night gathers her children among the stars.
She is the celestial vault that separates light from darkness, and the womb within which the Sun is reborn.
Nut is one of the most majestic and poetic figures of the Egyptian pantheon.
Her name, Nwt, means “Sky”, and her form is that of an arched woman stretching from one horizon to the other, her body covered with stars.
She is the mother of the five great Gods — Osiris, Isis, Seth, Nephthys, and Horus the Elder.
Each day, Nut swallows the Sun at sunset and gives birth to it at dawn, representing the eternal cycle of death and rebirth.
This cosmic act is both myth and spiritual process, the symbol of the soul dying to matter in order to be reborn into divine light.
Nut is the guardian of the souls of the departed, who she welcomes into her starry womb, guiding them through the journey of renewal.
In the funerary texts, the deceased invokes Nut so that she may “receive him among her stars and regenerate him as a child of heaven.”
She also represents absolute protection, the cosmic feminine principle that enfolds all things, ensuring balance between opposing forces — light and darkness, life and death, day and night.