Wadjet
Cobra goddess, symbol of royal power and divine protection. Wadjet watches over rulers and the just, bathing them in her green light. She embodies the vigilance and strength that defends the sacred.

Wadjet is the Cobra Goddess, protectress of the pharaoh and embodiment of the divine power that awakens and defends.
Her green fire is the flame of consciousness — it purifies and illuminates the path of both gods and men.
The name Wadjet derives from wadj, meaning “green,” the color of life, rebirth, and healing power.
She is the Goddess of Lower Egypt, associated with the city of Per-Wadjet (Buto), and together with Nekhbet (the vulture of Upper Egypt) forms the Double Crown of Power (Pschent), symbolizing the union of the Two Lands.
Depicted as a rearing royal cobra, Wadjet is the protective flame upon the pharaoh’s brow, the uraeus, symbol of his living divinity.
From her mouth bursts the green fire of divine power, capable of incinerating the enemies of Maat and purifying the hearts of the initiates.
Wadjet is also a Goddess of healing, vision, and spiritual rebirth.
In myth, she protects the young Horus from Seth during his childhood in the Nile Delta, and for this she is associated with vigilant sight and the guardianship of new life.
On a mystical level, Wadjet represents the energy of the sacred serpent that lies dormant at the base of the spine and, once awakened, rises to the forehead as divine light.
She is therefore the Egyptian personification of Kundalini — the power of the Goddess that transforms matter into light and the human being into a living divinity.
Her fire is both destructive and regenerative: it burns impurity and opens vision, dissolving illusion.