Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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-- Two important fragments of a copy of this work are preserved in the Museum of the Louvre (No. 5158), and a part of another in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo (No. 3); the former copy was written for a priest of Amen called Heru, and the latter for a priest called Hetra.
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Harmachis, and Thoth said unto Ra, "O Lord of the gods, Behutet hath returned in the form of the great Winged Disk, shining [with many colours] ... ... children;" for this reason he is called Heru -
Legends of the Gods The Egyptian Texts, edited with Translations 1895
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Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the [[sun]].
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Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui
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[1] Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the
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Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the [[sun]].
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[1] Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the
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Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui
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[1] Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the
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Horus is also referred to as Heru, Haroeris, Harpocrates, Har-Pa-Neb-Taui (Horus Lord of the Two Lands) and considered the patron of rulers, law, war, light and the [[sun]].
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