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Renenutet
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Renenūtet (also Ernūtet, Renen-wetet, Renenet) was a goddess of grain, grapes, nourishment and the harvest in the ancient Egyptian religion.

(2025). 9780195170245, Oxford University Press.
The importance of the harvest caused people to make many offerings to Renenutet during harvest time. Initially, her cult was centered in . Renenutet was depicted as a or as a woman with the head of a cobra. The verbs "to fondle, to nurse, or rear" help explain the name Renenutet. This goddess was a "nurse" who took care of the pharaoh from birth to death. She was also called "the mistress of provisions", "Renenutet mistress of the offerings", "Renenutet mistress of the food", and "Renenutet the venerable of the double granary", and "who maintains everybody".

She was the female counterpart of , "destiny", who represented the positive destiny of the child. Renenutet was called Thermouthis or Hermouthis in Greek. She embodied the fertility of the fields (both the vegetation and the soil itself) and was the protector of the royal office and power. She also came to be seen as a bringer of happiness, and was strongly associated with milk and breastfeeding.

Offerings to Renenutet were depicted in Egyptian wine making scenes,‘IREP EN KEMET’ WINE OF ANCIENT EGYPT: DOCUMENTING THE VITICULTURE AND WINEMAKING SCENES IN THE EGYPTIAN TOMBS M. R. Guasch-Jané, S. Fonseca, M. Ibrahim. ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume II-5/W1, 2013 XXIV International CIPA Symposium, 2 – 6 September 2013, Strasbourg, France and shrines to her were set up in vineyards. Images of her were found in kitchens, near ovens, in granaries, and in cellars. These images often invoked her to protect food stores against insects, mice, and snakes, not just as a provider of food. Her image also appears on stamps and stoppers for wine containers.

Sometimes, as the goddess of nourishment, Renenutet was seen as having a husband, . He was represented as the Nile River, the annual flooding of which deposited the fertile silt that enabled abundant harvests. The temple of is dedicated to both Sobek and Renenutet. It is a small and decorated building in the Faiyum.

More usually, Renenutet was seen as the mother of who occasionally was also represented as a snake. When considered the mother of Nehebkau, Renenutet was seen as having a husband, , who represented the earth.

She was the mother of the god Nepri.

Later, as a snake goddess worshiped over the whole of , Renenutet was increasingly associated with , Lower Egypt's powerful protector and another snake goddess represented as a cobra. Eventually Renenutet was identified as an alternate form of Wadjet, whose gaze was said to slaughter enemies. Wadjet was the cobra shown on the crown of the pharaohs.

Renenutet was also identified with , a cobra goddess of the Theban necropolis, and was syncretized with .


Festivals
The Festival of Renenutet was an annual Egyptian celebration held between the end of and the beginning of . It marked the first day of the harvest season and symbolically linked the birth of child gods to the gathering of new crops. These deities were perceived as providers of fertility and their cyclical rebirth as young solar gods ensured the regeneration of the sun. The festival also incorporated the cult of the reigning monarch, who was identified with the divine child of the local triad, thus reinforcing the legitimacy of royal succession.Varga, Dániel (2023). The Children of Montu: Harpara and Horus-Shu in Ptolemaic and Roman Thebes. Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections. Vol. 39. p.275.

The festival’s origins can be traced back to at least the New Kingdom. It was originally seen as the day when Renenutet gave birth to her son Nepri, the god of grain. In Thebes, several child deities were venerated, including -pa-khered, Harsiese (Opet Temple), Harpre-pa-khered (North Karnak and Armant), and Somtous (Ptah Temple and Deir el-Medina). It became a festivael particularly in honor of Khonsu, after whom the month of Pashons was named.Klotz, David (2012). The Theban Cult of Chonsu the Child in the Ptolemaic Period. In Thiers, Christophe (ed.). Documents de Théologies Thébaines Tardives. Université Paul Valéry. p.96.


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