var GodThing =  new Array(10);
var NowDateTime = new Date();
var MaxNumberGods = 3;
var NumberOfGod = 0
var NumberOfMonth = 0
var MonthNames = new Array(12)
MonthNames[1] = "January";
MonthNames[2] = "February";
MonthNames[3] = "March";
MonthNames[4] = "April";
MonthNames[5] = "May";
MonthNames[6] = "June";
MonthNames[7] = "July";
MonthNames[8] = "August";
MonthNames[9] = "September";
MonthNames[10] = "October";
MonthNames[11] = "November";
MonthNames[12] = "December";
function MonthName(NumberOfMonth) {
var FullMonthName = MonthNames[NumberOfMonth];
 return FullMonthName;
}
function NowDate(){
var theMonth = NowDateTime.getMonth() + 1;
var theDay  = NowDateTime.getDate();
var theYear  = NowDateTime.getYear();
if (NowDateTime.getYear() < 1900) {
theYear=NowDateTime.getYear()+1900;
	}

theMonth = MonthName(theMonth);
        return theMonth + " " + theDay + "," + theYear
}


function CreateGod(givenName,otherNames,TextForGod) {
this.Name= givenName;
if (otherNames == "@" ) {
otherNames = "none"; 
}
this.OtherName= otherNames;
this.Description= TextForGod;
}


function initGod() {

GodThing[1] = new CreateGod('Aah','Aah-te-Huti','A Egyptian moon god which the priesthood by the 2nd millinium B.C. had ceased mentioning in temple writings.  An manifestation of Thoth in the form of an ibis.');
GodThing[2] = new CreateGod('Aapep','@','Egyptian serpent-god, see Apep.');
GodThing[3] = new CreateGod('Aken','@','Egyptian underworld god.  Keeper of the ferryboat of the Underworld.');
GodThing[4] = new CreateGod('Akephalos','@','A type of \'headless\' demon of Hellenistic Egypt, believed to be the spirits of beheaded criminals.');
GodThing[5] = new CreateGod('Aker','@','Egyptian earth god who ruled over the meeting point between the eastern and western horizons in the Egyptian underworld.  Guardian of the gate through which the pharaoh into the underworld.  He provided safe passage for the barque of the sun during its night passage through the underworld.  Aker was represented by two pairs of lions or of human heads facing away from each other.');
GodThing[6] = new CreateGod('Akeru','@','Egyptian chthonic earth gods associated with the god Aker.');
GodThing[7] = new CreateGod('Amaunet','@','\"Hidden One\".  Egyptian mother or fertility goddess.  Amaunet merged with the god Neith at the beginning of time.  She was a member of the group of Egyptian gods known as the Ogdoad.  Amun was her consort among the Ogdoad.  She was regarded as a tutelary deity of the Egyptian pharaohs, and had a prominent part in the pharaoh\'s accession ceremonies.');
GodThing[8] = new CreateGod('Amenhotep','Amenhotep-Son-of-Hapu','Egyptian architect raised to status of a god of building.  See Imhotep.');
GodThing[9] = new CreateGod('Amentet','Amenthes','Egyptian goddess of the West and of the underworld of the dead.');
GodThing[10] = new CreateGod('Am-heh','@','Egyptian chthonic underworld god.');
GodThing[11] = new CreateGod('Ammut','Ammit','\"Devouress of the Dead\".  Egyptian demonic goddess who attended the Judging of the Dead.  She was depicted as having the head of a crocodile, the torso of a lioness and the hindquarters of a hippopotamus.  She waited in the Judgement Hall of the Two Truths during the Weighing of the Heart ceremony, and devoured those who were sinners in life.');
GodThing[12] = new CreateGod('Amun','Amon, Amana, Ammon, Hammon, Amen','\"The Hidden One\".  Egyptian sky god who came to be regarded as a sun god and the head of the Egyptian pantheon.  Originally a local god of Khmun, then also of Thebes.  Amun\'s cult rose in prominence as Thebes rose to a preeminent political position within Egypt.  In the New Kingdom he became syncretized with the Heliopolitan sun god Re as Amun-Re, in which form he was the \"king of the gods\" and the tutelary deity of the pharaohs.  The pharaohs, who had been considered \"sons of Re\", thus came to be regarded as incarnations of Amun-Re.  Amun took on the role of a primeval deity and creator in the cosmology of the New Kingdom, creating earth and sky out of his thought.  He was a member of the Ogdoad, paired with the goddess Amaunet and representing hidden power.  Also a member of the Theban triad, which made him the husband of Mut and adoptive father of Khons.   Amun was depicted in human form, with blue skin and either the head of a bearded man or a ram\'s head with curved horns.  He wore a crown composed of a modius surmounted by two tall feather plumes.He was sometimes depicted in ithyphallic form with an oversized erect  penis.  His true appearance was considered beyond human understanding.  He was said to be \"hidden of aspect, mysterious of form\", invisible yet omnipresent throughout the cosmos.  Amun\'s sacred animals were the ram and the goose.  His primary sanctuaries were at Karnak and Luxor near Thebes.  Amun and his influentialTheban priests suffered a temporary eclipse during the reign of  Akhenaton, who tried to impose a monotheistic worship of Aton.  The cult of Amun revived soon after Akhenaton\'s death.  It was not until the sack of Thebes by the Assyrians in 663 BC that Amun was reduced to mere local importance.  As Ammon, however, he had an oracle at the Siwa Oasis in the western desert that remained prominent at least until the time of Alexander the Great, who visited the oracle.');
GodThing[13] = new CreateGod('Amun-Re','Amon-Ra','A combination of Amun and Re worshipped in later Egyptian history. Under this name, the Theban god Amun (qv) became the national  god of Egypt.');
GodThing[14] = new CreateGod('Andjety','Anezti, Anedjti','Egyptian underworld god.  His worship originated in the ninth nome of Lower Egypt.  His cult center was at Busiris.  Andjety  was responsible for the rebirth of the individual in the afterlife. Depicted in anthropomorphic form, he wore a high conical crown surmounted by two feather plumes, and bore the crook and flail.  He was associated with Osiris, whose symbols were also the crook and flail as well as the \'atef\' crown which resembled that worn by Andjety.');
GodThing[15] = new CreateGod('Anezti','Anedjti','God of the ninth nome of Lower Egypt.');
GodThing[16] = new CreateGod('Anhur','Anhert, Anhuret, Greek Onuris','Egyptian warrior and hunter god.  His cult originated in the Upper Egyptian city of This (Thinis), near Abydos.  His consort was the lion goddess Mekhit.  He was depicted as a bearded warrior wearing a long robe and a headdress with four tall plumes, often bearing a spear.  He is often shown accompanied by Mekhit.  Anhur was the champion of Egypt who hunted and slew the enemies of the sun god Re.  He was sometimes equated with the god Shu.  The Ptolemaic Greeks equated him with Ares.  His main cult center was at Sebennytos in the Nile Delta.');
GodThing[17] = new CreateGod('Anti','@','Egyptian guardian deity.  Depicted as a falcon or with a falcon\'s head, often standing on a crescent-shaped boat.');
GodThing[18] = new CreateGod('Anubis','Anpu','Egyptian god of the dead, represented as a black jackal or dog, or as a man with the head of a dog or jackal.  His parents were usually given as Re in combination with either Nephthys or Isis.  After the early period of the Old Kingdom, he was superseded by Osiris as god of the dead, being relegated to a supporting role as a god of the funeral cult and of the care of the dead.  The black colour represented the colour of human corpses after they had undergone the embalming process.  In the Book of the Dead, he was depicted as presiding over the weighing of the heart  of the deceased in the Hall of the Two Truths.  In his role as psychopomp he was referred to as the \"conductor of souls\".  The Greeks later identified him with their god Hermes, resulting in the composite deity Hermanubis.  His principal sanctuary was at the necropolis in Memphis and in other cities.  Anubis was also known as Khenty-Imentiu - \"chief of the westerners\" - a reference to the Egyptian belief that the realm of the dead lay to the west in association with the setting sun, and to their custom of building cemeteries on the west bank of the Nile.');
GodThing[19] = new CreateGod('Anuket','Anqet, Anquet, Greek Anukis','Egyptian goddess personifying the Nile as nourisher of the fields,and particularly associated with the lower cataracts near Aswan. She also appears to have been a protective deity of childbirth. Her principal sanctuary was at Elephantine.  She was variously considered the daughter of Re, Khnum or Satis.  Depicted in human form, bearing a crown topped with ostrich feathers.  Her sacred animal was the gazelle.');
GodThing[20] = new CreateGod('Apep','Apophis(Greek), Apepi','Egyptian snake god.  The eternal enemy of the sun god Re and of the cosmic order.  He was the personification of darkness, evil and of the forces of chaos.  Each night he did battle with Re on his journey through the underworld on the barque of the sun, and each night Re triumphed to be reborn at dawn in the east.  Often it was the god Seth or the serpent Mehen who weredepicted defending Re and the solar barque.  Occasionally, Apep would gain a temporary victory, causing an eclipse, but Re always triumphed in the end.  In one variant Egyptian account, Re finally gained a permanent victory over Apep, cutting up and burning his body.');
GodThing[21] = new CreateGod('Apis','Greek form',' Egyptian Hapi, Hape;Egyptian bull god of Memphis.  Originally a form of the Nile god Hapi, later regarded as the living embodiment of the god Ptah.Isis was supposed to have conceived him after being struck by a flash of lightning.  After death he was said to become, or enter,the god Osiris. Apis was represented by a black and white bull selected on the basis of distinguishing markings: all black save for a white triangular patch on the forehead.  His priests derived omens from his behavior.  When an Apis bull died, it was mummified and buried with much ceremony at Sakkarah in an underground tomb known to the Greeks as the Serapeum.  His priests then searched for a calf with the appropriate markings that indicated that it was his successor.  The Egyptian pharaohs were closely associated with the Apis bull, partaking of his strength and fertility in life and aided in their ascent to the sun-god after death.  In iconography, the Apis bull was depicted with the solar disk between its horns and also bearing the uraeus (cobra amulet) on its head. Apisirahts ');
GodThing[22] = new CreateGod('Arensnuphis','Egyptian Ari-hes-nefer',' Arsnuphis, Harensnuphis;Benign god of Egyptian Nubia.  He had a temple at Philae, where he was referred to as the companion of Isis, the chief local deity. Depicted in human form with a plumed crown or in the form of a lion.');
GodThing[23] = new CreateGod('Ash','As','Egyptian god of the Libyan Desert (Sahara).  Known as the \'Lord of Libya\'.  Depicted in human form, sometimes with the head of a hawk.He was particularly associated with the fertile oases of the desert whose produce was prized in ancient Egypt.  In his capacity as a desert god, Ash was sometimes identified with the god Seth.');
GodThing[24] = new CreateGod('Aten','Aton','\"Disk\" or \"Sun Disk\".  Egyptian sun god.  Originally a manifestation of the sun god, later a deity separate from the sun gods Atum and Re.  Aten was depicted as a winged sun disk or as a sun disk from which rays ending in hands extended.  The sun disk was also subtended by the uraeus (cobra amulet) and some of thehands held the ankh (\"life\") symbol.  His main sanctuaries were in Thebes, Heliopolis, and Akhetaten.   His cult reached a peak under the pharaoh Akhenaten, whoattempted to establish a monotheistic cult with Aten as the sole object of worship.  This monotheistic cult antagonized the powerful priests of Amun-Re, who lost much of their influence during Akhenaten\'s reign.  Akhenaten built the city Akhetaten (modern Tel el-Amarna) to serve as Aten\'s cult center.  However, Egypt returned to polytheism after A khenaten\'s death.  Akhetaten was abandoned, the priests of Amun-Re regained their power and influence, and Aten\'s significance dwindled to that of a god not formally worshipped in the state religion.');
GodThing[25] = new CreateGod('Atum','Tem, Tum','Primeval Egyptian sun god, creator of heaven and earth.  Evening aspect of the sun, representing the setting sun.  He was later syncretized with Re, the god of the rising sun, as the god Atum-Re. His principal cult center was at Heliopolis, which he shared with Re.  Both Atum and Re were represented by the black bull Mnevis, bearing the the sun disk and uraeus (cobra) between its horns.  The Egyptians regarded him as the father of the pharaoh, and he played an important part in the rites of coronation.  Atum was depicted in human form, usually as an older man symbolizing the setting sun. Among the animals sacred to him were the bull, lion, ichneumon,snake and lizard. Atum was said to have engendered himself out of the primeval waters.  He then created the deities Shu and Tefnut, either from his semen in the act of masturbation or, alternatively, from his spittle.  From those two the remainder of the nine gods of the Heliopolitan Ennead were descended.');
GodThing[26] = new CreateGod('Auf','Efu Ra','Name of Egyptian sun-god Re during night journey through underworld.');
GodThing[27] = new CreateGod('Ausaas','@','Egyptian wife of Herakhty (Horus).');
GodThing[28] = new CreateGod('Ba','#1','Early Egyptian ram god of Mendes in Lower Egypt.  He was a fertility deity whom women worshipped in the hope that he would aid them in conceiving children.  See also Banebdjedet.');
GodThing[29] = new CreateGod('Ba','#2 pl: Baw','Egyptian term for a spiritual power, later for the manifested form of a god.<A HREF="eightparts.html">See the 8 parts of a human.</A>');
GodThing[30] = new CreateGod('Babi','@','Egyptian demonic god.  Depicted as a baboon with an erect penis. Babi was both a dangerous god who was said to live on human entrails and a god associated with sexual prowess in the afterlife. Mentioned in the Books of the Dead, he attended the ceremony of the Weighing of the Heart in the Hall of the Two Truths, waiting with Ammut to devour the souls of those found unworthy.  His penis was depicted being employed as the mast of the underworld ferry.');
GodThing[31] = new CreateGod('Banebdjedet','Ba Neb Tetet, Banebdedet, Baneb Djedet, Banaded','Egyptian ram god of Lower Egypt.  Consort of the fish goddess Hatmehyt and father of Harpokrates.  Depicted in anthropomorphic form with the head of a ram.  His cult was centered on Mendes in the Nile Delta.  According to one tradition, he interceded in the contest between Horus and Seth for the Egyptian throne.  Banebdejedet advised the gods to consult the goddess Neith, who advised them to award the throne to Horus.  In this account, he was said to reside on the island of Seheil near the first cataract of the Nile at Aswan.');
GodThing[32] = new CreateGod('Ba-Pef','@','\"That Soul\". Little known Egyptian god of malevolent aspect.');
GodThing[33] = new CreateGod('Bastet','Bast, Ubasti','Egyptian cat  goddess.  A goddess of the home and of the domestic cat, although she sometimes took on the war-like aspect of a lioness.  Daughter of the sun god Re, although sometimes regarded as the daughter of Amun.  Wife of Ptah and mother of the lion-god Mihos.  Her cult was centered on her sanctuary at Bubastis in the delta region, where a necropolis has been found containing mummified cats.  Bast was also associated with the \'eye of Re\', acting as the instrument of the sun god\'s vengeance.  She was depicted as a cat or in human form with the head of a cat, often holding the sacred rattle known as the sistrum.');
GodThing[34] = new CreateGod('Bat','Bata','Egyptian cow goddess of fertility.  Primarily a deity of Upper Egypt.  She was depicted as a cow or in human form with cow\'s ears and horns.');
GodThing[35] = new CreateGod('Behedti','@','Egyptian god in the form of a crouching falcon.  Worshipped at Behdet (Edfu), he later was identified as a local form of the god Horus.');
GodThing[36] = new CreateGod('Benu','Bennu','Egyptian bird-like sun god. Linked with Atum, the better known sun god of Heliopolis.  Said to have been self-created from the primeval ocean.<BR>This was the phoenix  usually depicted as a heron, but also as a peacock or an eagle. The brilliantly red and golden plumed Bennu was the sacred bird of Heliopolis. Identified as a heron with its long straight back and head adorned at the back with two erect feathers, the Bennu was later named Phoenix by the Greeks. The Bennu lived on the ben-ben stone or obelisk within the sanctuary of Heliopolis and was worshipped alongside Ra and Osiris. It was said to create itself from the fire that burned on the top of the sacred Persea tree in Heliopolis. The sun rose in the form of the Bennu each morning. Bennu was also considered a manifestation of Osiris, said to spring from his heart as a living symbol of the god. The Bennu symbolizes rebirth as it rises from the ashes, just as the new sun rises from the old.from its ashes.');
GodThing[37] = new CreateGod('Bes','Bisu','Egyptian dwarf god believed to guard against evil spirits and misfortune.  In contrast to the other Egyptian deities, who were usually depicted in profile, Bes was depicted full face.  He was shown to be ugly and grotesque in appearance, with a large head,protruding tongue, bow legs and a bushy tail.  He bore a plumed crown and wore the skin of a lion or panther. Despite his appearance, he was a beneficent deity and his appearance was meant to scare off evil spirits.  He bore swords and knives to ward off evil spirits, as well as musical instruments which he used to create a din which would frighten them off.  Bes aided the hippopotamus goddess Taweret in childbirth.  He was originally the protective deity of the royal house of Egypt, but came to be a popular household deity throughout Egypt.');
GodThing[38] = new CreateGod('Beset','@','Egyptian goddess, a female version of Bes.');
GodThing[39] = new CreateGod('Buchis','@','Egyptian holy bull of Hermonthis, the living image of the god Month.  He had a white body and a black head.');
GodThing[40] = new CreateGod('Buto','Edjo, Udjo, Wadjet, Wadjit','Tutelary goddess of Lower Egypt.');
GodThing[41] = new CreateGod('Chensit','@','Egyptian goddess of the twentieth nome of Lower Egypt.');
GodThing[42] = new CreateGod('Chenti-cheti','Greek Chentechtai','Originally an Egyptian crocodile god, he later took on the form of a falcon.');
GodThing[43] = new CreateGod('Chenti-irti','Machenti-irti','Egyptian falcon-god of law and order, identified with Horus.');
GodThing[44] = new CreateGod('Cherti','@','Egyptian ram-god and ferryman od the dead.  His cult was centered on Letopolis.');
GodThing[45] = new CreateGod('Chnum','Chnumu','Egyptian ram god and protector of the source of the Nile.  Depicted in human form with a ram\'s head.  He was said to fashion children out of clay and then place them in the mother\'s womb.');
GodThing[46] = new CreateGod('Chons','@','Egyptian moon god, son of Amun and Mut.  He is usually depicted as a young man in the posture of a mummy.');
GodThing[47] = new CreateGod('Chontamenti','Chonti-amentiu','Egyptian god of the dead and of the land of the west, represented as a crouching dog or jackal.');
GodThing[48] = new CreateGod('Dedun','Dedwen','Egyptian-Nubian god of wealth and incense, associated with the riches of the southern lands.  Usually depicted in human form but occasionally as a lion.');
GodThing[49] = new CreateGod('Djebauti','Zebauti','Egyptian local god.');
GodThing[50] = new CreateGod('Dua','@','Egyptian god of toiletry.');
GodThing[51] = new CreateGod('Duamutef','Tuamutef','Egyptian funerary god, son of Horus.');
GodThing[52] = new CreateGod('Geb','Keb, Seb','Egyptian earth god.  Son of Shu and Tefnut.  Brother and consort of the sky god Nut.  Father of Osiris, Seth, Isis, and Nephthys.  Geb was generally depicted lying on his back, often wearing the crown of Lower Egypt, with the naked body of Nut arched above him.  In this context, he was often shown with an erect penis (an obelisk represents that) pointing upward toward Nut.  Sometimes, however, the air god Shu was shown standing on the body of Geb, supporting Nut and perhaps separating her from Geb (as described in the story of the creation of the sky and earth).  His skin was often green, indicative of his role as a god of fertility and vegetation.  The goose was his sacred animal and his symbol in Egyptian hieroglyphics.  Geb was also said to imprison the souls of the dead, preventing them from passing on to the afterlife.  The laughter of Geb was said to cause earthquakes.');
GodThing[53] = new CreateGod('The Great Ennead','@','Nine most important Egyptian gods:Ra, Shu, Tefnut, Geb, Nut, Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys according to the <A HREF="creategy.html">Heliopolis Creation Story</A>.');
GodThing[54] = new CreateGod('Ha','@','Egyptian god of the western desert.');
GodThing[55] = new CreateGod('Hapi (1)','Hapy, Hap, Hep','Egyptian god of the Nile.  Particularly associated with the annual floods which were responsible for the fertility of the land adjacent to the river.  Although he had no specific cult center she was believed to live in caves near the Nile cataracts.  Depicted in androgynous human form with a beard, large belly, pendulous breasts and a crown of aquatic plants.  He often bore a tray of produce symbolizing the abundance and prosperity brought by the Nile floods.  His court included a retinue of crocodile-gods and a harem of frog-goddesses.');
GodThing[56] = new CreateGod('Hapi (2)','@','Egyptian god.  One of the four sons of Horus.  Protector of the lungs of mummified corpses.  Depicted as an baboon or in human form with the head of a baboon.');
GodThing[57] = new CreateGod('Harakhti','Harachte','\"Horus of the Horizon\".  Egyptian god of the morning sun rising on the eastern horizon.  One of the manifestations of Horus.  Depicted in the form of a falcon.  The Egyptian pharaoh was said to be born on the eastern horizon as Harakhti and to rule over the two horizons (east and west) in that form.  Harakhti coalesced with Re as Re-Harakhti, in which form he was worshipped at Heliopolis.');
GodThing[58] = new CreateGod('Harendotes','Egyptian Har-nedj-itef','\"Horus the saviour of his father\".  A special form of the Egyptian god Horus.  In this form Horus guards his father Osiris in the underworld.  He was one of the protective gods typically depicted on the Egyptian sarcophagi.  It is this form that also referes to Horus\'s vindication of his father and triumph over his enemy Seth.');
GodThing[59] = new CreateGod('Harmachis','Egyptian Har-em-akhet','\"Horus in the horizon\".  A form of the Egyptian god Horus in which he figures as a sun god.  Inscriptions from the New Kingdom (1550-1000 BC) identify the sphinx at Giza, originally made in the image of Pharaoh Khephren, as Harmachis looking toward the eastern horizon.');
GodThing[60] = new CreateGod('Harmerti','@','Egyptian tutelary god of Seden.');
GodThing[61] = new CreateGod('Haroeris','Egyptian Har-wer','\"The Elder Horus\".  One of the manifestations of the Egyptian god Horus, in which form Horus reaches maturity and avenges his father Osiris against his enemy Seth.  In this form Horus defeats Seth and seizes control of the throne of Egypt.  Depicted in the form of a falcon.');
GodThing[62] = new CreateGod('Harpokrates','Harpocrates, Egyptian Har-pa-khered','\"Horus the Child\".  The form of the Egyptian god Horus as a child. Depicted as a naked child sitting on the knee of his mother Isis,wearing the juvenile side-lock of hair.  Often, he is either sucking his thumb or suckling at his mother\'s breast.  Harpokrates was invoked to ward off dangerous creatures.');
GodThing[63] = new CreateGod('Harsiesis','Harsiese, Egyptian Har-sa-iset','\"Horus the son of Isis\".  A form of the Egyptian god Horus which emphasizes his role as the son of Isis and Osiris.  In this form he exemplifies the ideal of the dutiful son.  In the Pyramid Texts Harsiesis performed the \'opening of the mouth\' rite on the dead pharaoh, ensuring that the pharaoh would have the use of his faculties in the afterlife.');
GodThing[64] = new CreateGod('Harsomtus','Egyptian Har-mau','\"Horus the uniter\".  A manifestation of the Egyptian god Horus. This form celebrates Horus\'s achievement in uniting the kingdoms of Upper and Lower Egypt.');
GodThing[65] = new CreateGod('Hathor','Athyr','Egyptian cow goddess.  Daughter of Nut and Re.  In early Egyptian mythology she was the mother of the sky god Horus, but was later replaced in this capacity by Isis.  Hathor then became a protectress of Horus.  She was depicted either as a cow or in human form wearing a crown consisting of a sun disk held between the horns of a cow.      Her name appears to mean \"house of Horus\", referring to her role as a sky goddess, the \"house\" denoting the heavens depicted as a great cow.  Hathor was often regarded as the mother of the Egyptian pharaoh, who styled himself the \"son of Hathor\".  Since the pharaoh was also considered to be Horus as the son of Isis, it might be surmised that this had its origin when Horus was considered to be the son of Hathor.Hathor took on an uncharacteristically destructive aspect in the legend of the Eye of Re.  According to this legend, Re sent the Eye of Re in the form of Hathor to destroy humanity, believing that they were plotting aganist him.  However, Re changed his midand flooded the fields with beer, dyed red to look like blood.  Hathor stopped to drink the beer, and, having become intoxicated, never carried out her deadly mission.      Hathor was often symbolized by the papyrus reed, the snake,and the Egyptian rattle known as the sistrum.  Her image could also be used to form the capitals of columns in Egyptian architecture.  Her principal sanctuary was at Dandarah, where her cult had its early focus, and where it may have had its origin.  At Dandarah,she was particularly worshipped in her role as a goddess of fertility, of women, and of childbirth.  At Thebes she was regarded as a goddess of the dead under the title of the \"Lady of the West\", associated with the sun god Re on his descent below the western horizon.  The Greeks identified Hathor with Aphrodite.');
GodThing[66] = new CreateGod('Hatmehyt','Hatmehit','Egyptian fish goddess.  Her worship centered on the Nile delta,particularly at Mendes.');
GodThing[67] = new CreateGod('Hedetet','@','Egyptian scorpion-goddess.');
GodThing[68] = new CreateGod('Heket','Heqet, Heqtit','Egyptian goddess of childbirth.  Depicted as a frog or in human form with the head of a frog.  Women often wore amulets bearing the image of Heket to protect them during childbirth.<BR><BR>She was worshipped at Her-uret near Edfu and later at Abydos as well. Early on she became associated with Khnum a creator god in a nearby village, and she was the birth goddess, the goddess who gave life to his creations. Her cult gained vast political powers in the Pyramid period. The earliest versions of the creation story in this region had Khnum(u) and Hequet being \'the first gods who were at the begginning, who built men and made the gods\'. When Heqet was transferred to Abydos she became combined with Hathor in the Osiris myth (Budge Vol I of Egyptian Gods].<BR><BR>The Frog was a primitive symbol of generation, birth and fertility. Heqet was mother of Heru-ur and has a head of a frog. The earliest representaions of Heh, Kekk, Nau, and Amen have frog heads, and the females a snake head. [Budge Vol II Egyptain Gods<BR><BR>But by the Pyramid times a birth of a pharoah regent like Hetshephut could be depicted with Heket having the frog head (as seen in the temple of Deir-el-Behari[Spence Myths of Ancient Egypt]. There are temples to her at Qus and the tomb inscription to her at Tuna al-Gebel [G. Hart, the Dictionary of the Gods and Godddesses]. <BR><BR> Spence talks about the early Semite (as slaves) knowledge of her and the ritual rebirth she made each spring, which eventually was manifested as the Christ myth.');
GodThing[69] = new CreateGod('Hemen','@','Egyptian falcon-god.');
GodThing[70] = new CreateGod('Hemsut','Hemuset','Egyptian goddess of fate.');
GodThing[71] = new CreateGod('Heron','@','Minor Egyptian deity.');
GodThing[72] = new CreateGod('Heryshaf','Herysaf, Hershef,Herisef,Greek Harsaphes or Arsaphes','\"He who is upon his lake\".  Primeval ram god of Middle Egypt.  His cult centered on Hnes (modern Ihnasya el-Medina; Greek Herakleopolis) near Beni Suef on the west bank of the Nile.  His temple featured a sacred lake representing the primeval waters from which Heryshaf emerged at the beginning of time.  Originally a local god, he came to be identified with Re and Osiris and attained national significance.');
GodThing[73] = new CreateGod('Hesat','@','Egyptian cow goddess.  The Egyptians referred to milk as the \'beer of Hesat\'.');
GodThing[74] = new CreateGod('Hetepet','@','Egyptian cult centre/goddess.');
GodThing[75] = new CreateGod('Hez-ur','@','Egyptian baboon-god.');
GodThing[76] = new CreateGod('Hike','Heka','Egyptian personification of magic.');
GodThing[77] = new CreateGod('Hor-Hekenu','@','Egyptian variant of Horus.');
GodThing[78] = new CreateGod('Horus','Egyptian Har or Hor','Egyptian sky god.  Usually depicted as a falcon or in human form with the head of a falcon.  The sun and the moon are said to be his eyes.  Son of Isis and the dead Osiris.  He was born at Khemmis in the Nile Delta, and Isis hid him in the papyrus marshes to protect him against Seth, his father\'s murderer. Horus later avenged the death of his father against Seth.  Horus lost his left eye (the moon) in the contest between the two. Horus was identified with Lower Egypt and Seth with Upper Egypt in this battle, which lasted eighty years.  The gods judged Horus to be the winner, and Seth was either killed or castrated.  The consequence of Horus\'s victory was the union of Upper and Lower Egypt.  The Egyptian pharaoh was believed to be an incarnation of Horus, and the name of Horus formed part of his name.  The pharaoh was said to become Horus after death.  Seth restored the eye he had torn from Horus, but Horus gave it instead to Osiris.  The image of the \"eye of Horus\", a human eye combined with the cheek markings of a falcon, became a powerful amulet among the Egyptians.Among the various manifestations of Horus were: <UL><LI> <B>Harpokrates (Heru-Pa-Khret, Harpakhrad)</B>: \"Horus the child\". This refers to his birth and secret rearing by Isis.  In this form he is often depicted as a naked child seated on Isis\'s lap. <p> <LI> <B>Haroeris (Har Wer)</B>: \"Horus the elder\".  In this form Horus battled against Seth.<p><LI> <B>Harakhte (Harakhti, Heraktes)</B>: \"Horus of the horizon\". Horus at Heliopolis, linked with Ra in the sun cult.  In this form he is associated with the rising sun.<p><LI> <B>Harendotes (Har-nedj-itef, Har-End-Yotef)</B>: \"Horus the saviour of his father\"  A reference to the avenging of his father\'s murder.<p><LI> <B>Harmachis (Heru-Em-Akhet, Harmakis)</B>: <p>\"Horus in the horizon\".  Horus as symbol of resurrection, linked with the setting sun.<p><LI> <B>Harsiesis (Harsiese, Har-si-Ese, Hor-Sa-Iset)</B>: \"Horus, son of Isis\". <p><LI> <B>Harsomtus (Har-mau)</B>: \"Horus the uniter\"  This is a reference to his role in uniting Upper and Lower Egypt. <p><LI> <B>Hor Behdetite (Behedti)</B>: \"Horus of Behdet\".  Originally a local form of Horus as Behdet in the Delta region.  In this form he was symbolized by the winged solar disk.</UL>');
GodThing[79] = new CreateGod('Haroeris','Har Wer',' \"Horus the elder\".  In this form Horus battled against Seth.');
GodThing[80] = new CreateGod('Harakhte','Harakhti, Heraktes',' \"Horus of the horizon\". Horus at Heliopolis, linked with Ra in the sun cult.  In this form he is associated with the rising sun.');
GodThing[81] = new CreateGod('Harendotes','Har-nedj-itef, Har-End-Yotef',' \"Horus the saviour of his father\"  A reference to the avenging of his father\'s murder.');
GodThing[82] = new CreateGod('Harmachis','Heru-Em-Akhet, Harmakis',' \"Horus in the horizon\".  Horus as symbol of resurrection, linked with the setting sun.');
GodThing[83] = new CreateGod('Harsiesis','Harsiese, Har-si-Ese, Hor-Sa-Iset',' \"Horus, son of Isis\".');
GodThing[84] = new CreateGod('Harsomtus','Har-mau',' \"Horus the uniter\"  This is a reference to his role in uniting Upper and Lower Egypt.');
GodThing[85] = new CreateGod('Hor Behdetite','Behedti','\"Horus of Behdet\".  Originally a local form of Horus as Behdet in the Delta region.  In this form he was symbolized by the winged solar disk.');
GodThing[86] = new CreateGod('Hu','@','Primeval Egyptian god personifying authority.  He was born from a  drop of blood from the penis of Re.  When the pharaoh became a lone star, his companion was Hu.');
GodThing[87] = new CreateGod('Ihi','Ehi','Egyptian god of the sistrum.');
GodThing[88] = new CreateGod('Imhotep','Imhetep','Egyptian god of learning and medicine.');
GodThing[89] = new CreateGod('Imiut','@','Egyptian protective deity of underworld.');
GodThing[90] = new CreateGod('Imset','Amset','Egyptian son of Horus.');
GodThing[91] = new CreateGod('Inmutef','Iunmutef','Egyptian bearer of the heavens.');
GodThing[92] = new CreateGod('Ipet','Ipi','Egyptian hippopotamus goddess.');
GodThing[93] = new CreateGod('Isdes','@','Egyptian \'lord of the west\' and judge of the dead.');
GodThing[94] = new CreateGod('Isis','Aset, Eset','\"Throne\".  Egyptian mother goddess.  Daughter of Geb and Nut according to the Heliopolitan genealogy.  Sister and wife of Osiris.  Mother of Horus.  She was depicted in human form, crowned either by a throne or by cow horns enclosing a sun disk.  A vulture was also sometimes incorporated in her Crown.  She is sometimes depicted as a kite above the mummified body of Osiris.  As the personification of the throne, she was an important source of the pharaoh\'s power.  Her cult was popular throughout Egypt, but  the most  important sanctuaries were at Giza and at Behbeit El-Hagar inthe Nile delta.  Isis later had an important cult in the Greco-Roman world, with sanctuaries at Delos and Pompeii.  Her Latin epithet was Stella Maris, or \"star of the sea\". It was Isis who retrieved and reassembled the body of Osiris after his murder and dismemberment by Seth. In this connection she took on the role of a goddess of the dead and of funeral rites. Isis impregnated herself from the corpse and subsequently gave birth to Horus.  She gave birth in secrecy at Khemmis in the Nile delta and hid the child from Seth in the papyrus swamps.  Horus later defeated Seth and became the first ruler of a united Egypt.  Isis, as mother of Horus, was by extension regarded as the mother and protectress of the pharaohs.  The relationship between Isis and Horus may also have influenced the Christian conception of the relationship between Mary and the infant Jesus Christ.  The  depiction of the seated Isis holding or suckling the child Horus iscertainly reminiscent of the iconography of Mary and Jesus. ');
GodThing[95] = new CreateGod('Isten','@','This name does appear in a Coffin Text (see R.O. Faulkner \'The Ancient Egyptian Coffin Texts\' Volume III Spell number 1029 p127 footnote 8) but it is really obscure and may refer to the itnws-tree even with the god declension mark after it. <BR><BR>Furthermore Isten (istan) is Old Persian for god, and the coffin text was created after Xerxes\' army was ensconced in Egypt so it may be a borrowed sound word. Of course today the word istan means land or country (Afghan-ISTAN, Turk-ISTAN, but not ISTAN-bul  that has a different etiology).<BR><BR>The itnws-tree or, as usually spelled, Ished-tree, was a holy decidious fruit tree, a famous one residing in the house of Obelisks at Heliopolis. After a  victory Re split the tree to start a dawn and sunrise early to celebrate. This is shown as the tree drawn on the top of two mountains flanking a rising sun on the roof of a Re temple at Dendera.  Also it was the leaves of this tree that Thoth and Seshat wrote the years a pharaoh would reign thus putting him under divine protection for that time. ');
GodThing[96] = new CreateGod('Joh','Jah','Egyptian moon-god.');
GodThing[97] = new CreateGod('Juesaes','Jusas, Iusas','Minor Egyptian goddess.');
GodThing[98] = new CreateGod('Junit','@','Egyptian goddess.');
GodThing[99] = new CreateGod('Ka','@','Egyptian name for the vital force of life.');
GodThing[100] = new CreateGod('Kebechet','@','Egyptian goddess who was Anubis\' daughter.');
GodThing[101] = new CreateGod('Kebechsenef','Kebehsenuf','Falcon-headed son of Horus.');
GodThing[102] = new CreateGod('Kematef','@','Late Egyptian name for Amun.');
GodThing[103] = new CreateGod('Kemwer','Kemur','Egyptian black bull.');
GodThing[104] = new CreateGod('Khepra','Kheper, Khepera, Khepri, Chepre, Chepri','Egyptian sun god in the form of a scarab, or dung beetle.  A manifestation of the sun god Re rising in the east at dawn.  The association reputedly resulted from the similarity between the scarab rolling a ball of dung along the ground and Re rolling the sun across the sky.  It was Khepra who pushed the sun up from the underworld to be reborn at dawn.  In the Heliopolitan cosmology he appeared as a primordial sun god who created himself out of the earth.  His principal cult center was at Heliopolis.');
GodThing[105] = new CreateGod('Kherty','Cherti','\"Lower One\".  Egyptian ram god of the underworld.  In the Pyramid Texts Kherty was said to be a threat to the pharaoh, who had to be defended by Re himself.  However, as an earth god Kherty also acts as a guardian of the pharaoh\'s tomb.  Depicted in human form or as a human with the head of a ram.  His main cult center was Letopolis, north-west of Memphis.');
GodThing[106] = new CreateGod('Khnum','Khnemu','Egyptian ram god.  Khnum was credited with creating life on a potter\'s wheel at the behest of the other gods.  He was also said to control the annual inundation of the Nile, although the inundation was physically generated by the god Hapi.  The goddesses Satis and Anuket assisted him in this supervisory role.  His major cult center was on Elephantine Island near the first cataract of the Nile (near modern Aswan), where mummified rams sacred to Khnum have been found.  He also had an important cult center at Esna, to the north of the first cataract.  He was usually depicted in human form with a ram\'s head - the horns extending horizontally on either side of the head - often before a potter\'s wheel on which a naked human being was being fashioned.');
GodThing[107] = new CreateGod('Khonsu','Khons, Khensu, Chons','\"Wanderer\".  Egyptian moon god.  Son of Amun and Mut, with whom he forms the triad of gods revered at Thebes.  Depicted in human form,sometimes with the head of a hawk, clothed in a tight-fitting robe and wearing a skull cap topped by the crescent of the new moon subtending the disk of the full moon.  His head was shaven except for the side-lock worn by Egyptian children, signifying his role as Khonsu-pa-khered (\"Khonsu the child\"), the divine child of Amun and Mut. He caused the crescent moon to shine, cattle to be fertile, and lungs to inhale.');
GodThing[108] = new CreateGod('Mut','@','  His principal sanctuary was at Thebes, where he figured prominently as a member of the Theban triad.  He also had a temple at Karnak.  His sacred animal was the baboon, considered a lunar animal by the Egyptians.');
GodThing[109] = new CreateGod('Kis','@','Egyptian god of Kusae.');
GodThing[110] = new CreateGod('Kuk and Kauket','@','Egyptian primeval gods.');
GodThing[111] = new CreateGod('Maahes','@','Egyptian lion-headed god.  Maahes was of Nubian origin.');
GodThing[112] = new CreateGod('Maat','Ma\'at, Mayet','\"Straight\": i.e. law and order.  Egyptian goddess of cosmic harmony and of truth and justice.  Maat was depicted as a woman with an ostrich feather on her head.  She was sometimes represented by the feather alone.  Maat was closely associated with Re from the beginning and eventually became known as the \'daughter of Re\'.  Thoth was sometimes given as her consort.  The pharaohs were said to derive their authority from Maat and claimed to uphold the cosmic order embodied in her.  In the funerary papyri of the New Kingdom it was Maat who sat in judgment at the weighing of the heart ceremony in the Hall of the Two Truths.  The heart of the deceased person was weighed against the image of Maat, often represented simply by the ostrich feather.  Her only known sanctuary was at Karnak.');
GodThing[113] = new CreateGod('Mafdet','@','Egyptian goddess in feline form, possibly that of a panther.  She was noted principally as a destroyer of snakes and scorpions.');
GodThing[114] = new CreateGod('Mahes','@','An Egyptian sun god in the form of a lion.  He was principally worshipped in the area of the Nile delta.');
GodThing[115] = new CreateGod('Mandulis','@','Nubian sky-god.');
GodThing[116] = new CreateGod('Mehen','@','Egyptian serpent god.  Mehen defended the solar barque of Re during its night passage through the underworld.  He was depicted as a snake coiled about the solar barque.');
GodThing[117] = new CreateGod('Mehet-Weret','Mehet-uret','\"Great Flood\".  Egyptian sky goddess in the form of a cow.  She was early regarded as the waterway of the heavens upon which the solar barque of Re travelled.  Later she came to be equated with the primeval waters from which Re emerged, in consequence of which she earned the epithet \'mother of Re\'.  She was depicted as a cow with the sun disk between its horns lying on a mat of reeds.');
GodThing[118] = new CreateGod('Mehit','Mechit','Egyptian lion-goddess.');
GodThing[119] = new CreateGod('Menhit','Menchit','\"She who slaughters.\"Egyptian lion-goddess.');
GodThing[120] = new CreateGod('Meret','Mert','Egyptian goddess of song and rejoicing.');
GodThing[121] = new CreateGod('Meretseger','Mertseger, Meresger','\"She who loves silence\".  Egyptian cobra goddess and protective deity of the Theban necropolis.  She was believed to live on a mountain overlooking the Valley of the Kings.  Worshipped by the workers at the necropolis, she was believed to poison or blind anyone who commited a crime.  Presumably, this belief was intended to reinforce the taboo against desecrating or robbing the tombs. She was depicted either as a coiled cobra or as a cobra with the head of a woman and a single human arm.  Her cult died out when the Theban necropolis was abandoned during Dynasty XXI (ca. 1000 BC).');
GodThing[122] = new CreateGod('Meskhenet','Meskhent, Mesenet, Meshkent','Egyptian goddess of childbirth.');
GodThing[123] = new CreateGod('Mesta','Imseti','Egyptian protector of the liver of mummified dead.');
GodThing[124] = new CreateGod('Min','Minu, Egyptian Menu','Egyptian fertility god.  Sometimes given as either the son or consort of Isis.  He was depicted in human form with an erect penis.  He generally held a flail in his raised right hand and wore a crown surmounted by two tall plumes.  Min was preeminently a god of male sexuality, and in the New Kingdom (1567-1085 BC) he was honoured in the coronation rites of the pharaohs to ensure their sexual vigour and the production of a male heir.  The \"White Bull\" appears to have been sacred to him, as was a type of lettuce which bore a resemblance to an erect penis and had a white sap that resembled semen.  His most important sanctuaries were at Koptos (Qift) and Akhmim (Panoplis).  Min was also worshipped as a god of desert roads and of travellers.  In addition to his role in coronation rites, Min was honoured in harvest festivals during which offerings of lettuce and sheaves of wheat.');
GodThing[125] = new CreateGod('Montu','Mont, Mentu, Menthu',' Greek Month;Falcon-headed war god of Upper Egypt.  His cult developed at Thebes and spread throughout Egypt under the Theban kings who expanded the country\'s borders beginning around 2000 BC.  He was the tutelary god of the Theban monarchs, and brought them victory in war.  Depicted in human form with the head of a falcon, crowned with thesolar disk, the uraeus (cobra) and two tall plumes.  His sacred animal was a white bull with a black face known as Buchis.  After death, the bulls were buried in a necropolis near Hermonthis (Armant) known as the Bucheum.  His cult centers included Medu (modern Medamud), Karnak and Hermonthis.');
GodThing[126] = new CreateGod('Morrigan','Morrigu','Celtic battle goddess.  She was said to hover over the battlefield in the form of a crow.');
GodThing[127] = new CreateGod('Mut','@','Egyptian vulture goddess and chief goddess of Thebes.  She was depicted either in the form of a vulture or in human form with a vulture head-dress and the combined crowns of Upper and Lower Egypt.  She was usually dressed in a bright red or blue gown.  At Thebes she replaced Amaunet as the consort of the sun god Amun.  With their adoptive son Khonsu the two formed the Theban triad. Her principal sanctuary was at Thebes.');
GodThing[128] = new CreateGod('Naunet','@','Primordial Egyptian goddess.  In the cosmogony of Hermopolis she was a member of the Ogdoad of eight primordial deities.  Her male counterpart and consort was Nun.  Naunet personified the primordial abyss of the underworld.');
GodThing[129] = new CreateGod('Nebtuu','Nebetu','Egyptian local goddess.');
GodThing[130] = new CreateGod('Nechbet','@','Upper Egyptian tutelary goddess of the monarch.');
GodThing[131] = new CreateGod('Nechmetawaj','Nehmet-awai','Egyptian goddess.');
GodThing[132] = new CreateGod('Neferhor','Nephoros, Nopheros','Egyptian god.');
GodThing[133] = new CreateGod('Nefertum','Nefertem',' Greek Nephthemis;Egyptian god of the primordial lotus blossom.  A personification of the blue lotus out of which the sun god Re emerged.  In the Pyramid Texts he was described as the \'lotus blossom on the nose of Re\'.  Nefertum ws usually depicted in human form wearing a headdress topped by a lotus blossom.  He could also be depicted with a lion\'s head when given as the child of the Memphite lion goddess Sakhmet out of her union with Ptah.  His major cult center was at Memphis. At Buto in the Nile delta region, Nefertum was held to be the child of the cobra  goddess Wadjet.  Elsewhere, his mother was sometimes said to be the cat goddess Bastet.');
GodThing[134] = new CreateGod('Nehebkau','Nehebu-Kau, Nehebkhau','Egyptian snake god.  In the Pyramid Texts, he was said to be the son of the scorpion goddess Serket.  Another tradition made him theson of the earth god Geb and the harvest goddess Renenutet. According to legend, he was tamed by the sun god Re and thenceforward acted as the god\'s servant, riding with him in the sun barque.  His name was invoked in spells providing protection against  snake bites and scorpion stings.  Nehebkau protected the dead pharaoh in the afterlife.  He was depicted in the form of a serpent with human arms and legs.');
GodThing[135] = new CreateGod('Neith','Neit','Egyptian creator goddess.  Also a goddess of hunting, war and of domestic arts.  Her symbol was a shield bearing crossed arrows.  Said to be a self-begotten virgin.  She later came to be identified as the consort of Seth and the mother of the crocodile god Sobek.  Her principal sanctuary was at Sais in the Nile delta, where she originally developed as a local goddess.  After rising to national prominence, a sanctuary was dedicated to her at Memphis.  In the Esna cosmology, Neith was said to have emerged from the primeval  waters to create the world, subsequently following the Nile north to the delta where she founded Sais.  Eventually she was said to be married to Khum another creator god.');
GodThing[136] = new CreateGod('Nekhbet','Nekhebet, Nechbet','\"She of Nekheb\".  Egyptian vulture goddess and tutelary goddess of Upper Egypt.  Also a protective goddess of childbirth who  was depicted as the nurse of the future monarch during his infancy.  In her capacity as protectress of the infant monarch she was known as the \"Great White Cow of Nekheb\".   She was usually depicted as a vulture wearing the white crown of Upper Egypt and holding the eternity symbols in her talons.  Her principal sanctuary was at Nekheb (modern El Kab) in Upper Egypt.');
GodThing[137] = new CreateGod('Neheh','Heh','Egyptian personification of eternity.');
GodThing[138] = new CreateGod('Nenun','Nenwen','Egyptian falcon-god.');
GodThing[139] = new CreateGod('Neper','@','Egyptian god of grain.  Particularly associated with barley and emmer wheat.');
GodThing[140] = new CreateGod('Nephthys','Greek form',' Egyptian Neb-hut, Nebthet;\"Mistress of the House\".  Egyptian goddess of the dead.  Daughter of Geb and Nut.  Sister of Isis, Osiris and Seth.  According to one tradition, she was also the mother of Anubis by Osiris.  Her principal sanctuary was at Heliopolis.  Along with Isis, she was one of the guardians of the corpse of Osiris.  Depicted in human form wearing a crown in the form of the hieroglyph for house.  Sometimes depicted as a kite guarding the funeral bier of Osiris.');
GodThing[141] = new CreateGod('Nepit','@','Egyptian corn goddess: female counterpart of the corn god Neper.');
GodThing[142] = new CreateGod('Nun','Nu','Egyptian god who personified the primeval waters from which the world was created.  Partner of Naunet as one of the eight creator deities of the Ogdoad.  He was referred to as the \'father of the gods\', which referred to his primacy in time rather than any literal parentage.  Nun played no part in Egyptian religious rituals and had no temples dedicated to him.  He was symbolized by the sacred lakes associated with some temples, such as Karnak and Dendara.  Depicted in human form holding the solar barque of Re above his head.');
GodThing[143] = new CreateGod('Nut','Neuth, Nuit','Egyptian goddess of the sky and of the heavens.  Daughter of the air god Shu and Tefnut, the goddess of moisture, in the Heliopolitan genealogy.  She was typically depicted as a woman with her elongated and naked body arching above Shu and the earth god Geb to form the heavens.  Sometimes she appeared in the form of a cow whose body forms the sky and heavens.  Nut was the barrier  separating the forces of chaos from the ordered cosmos in this world.  Her fingers and toes were believed to touch the four cardinal points or directions.  The sun god Re was said to enter her mouth after setting in the evening and travel through her body  during the night to be reborn from her each morning.  Nut  was also a goddess of the dead, and the pharaoh was said to enter her body after death, from which he would later be resurrected.  Her principal sanctuary was at Heliopolis.');
GodThing[144] = new CreateGod('Ogdoad','@','A group of eight Egyptian deities representing the primeval chaos that existed before the creation of the sun god.  They are divided into four parings of male and female deities: Nun and Naunet representing the primordial abyss, Kek and Kauket darkness, Heh and Hauhet infinity, and Amun and Amaunet representing hidden power.  They created out of themselves the mound upon which lay the egg from which the sun god emerged.  Their  cult centered on the town of Khemnu (Greek Hermopolis) in Middle Egypt.  They also had a sanctuary at Medinet Habu in western Thebes.');
GodThing[145] = new CreateGod('Onuris','@','Greek form of the Egyptian god Anhur (qv).');
GodThing[146] = new CreateGod('Osiris','Usire','Egyptian god of the underworld and of vegetation.  Son of Nut and Geb.  His birthplace was said to be Rosetau in the necropolis west of Memphis.  Brother of Nephthys and Seth, and the brother and husband of Isis.  Isis gave birth to Horus after his death, having impregnated herself with semen from his corpse.  Osiris was depicted in human form wrapped up as a mummy, holding the crook  and flail.  He was often depicted with green skin, alluding to his role as a god of vegetation.  He wore a crown known as the \'atef\', composed of the tall conical white crown of Upper Egypt with red  plumes on each side.  Osiris had many cult centers, but the most important were at Abydos (Ibdju) in Upper Egypt, where the god\'s legend was reenacted in an annual festival, and at Busiris (Djedu) in the Nile delta. One of the so-called \"dying gods\", he was the focus of a famous legend in which he was killed by the rival god Seth.  At a banquet of the gods, Seth fooled Osiris into stepping into a coffin, which he promptly slammed shut and cast into the Nile.  The coffin was born by the Nile to the delta town of Byblos, where it became enclosed in a tamarisk tree.  Isis, the wife of Osiris,discovered the coffin and brought it back.  (The story to this point is attested only by the Greek writer Plutarch, although Seth was identified as his murderer as early as the Pyramid era of the Old Kingdom.) Seth took advantage of Isis\'s temporary absence on one cccasion, cut the body to pieces, and cast them into the Nile.  (In the Egyptian texts this incident alone accounts for the murder of Osiris.)  Isis searched the land for the body parts of Osiris, and was eventually able to piece together his body, whole save for the penis, which had been swallowed by a crocodile (according to Plutarch) or a fish (according to Egyptian texts).  In some Egyptian texts, the penis is buried at Memphis.  Isis replaced the penis with a reasonable facsimile, and she was often portrayed in the form of a kite being impregnated by the ithyphallic corpse of Osiris.  In some Egyptian texts, the scattering of the body parts is likened to the scattering of grain in the fields, a reference to  Osiris\'s role as a vegetation god.  \'Osiris gardens\' - wood-framed barley seedbeds in the shape of the god, were sometimes placed in tombs - and the plants which sprouted from these beds symbolized the resurrection of life after death. It was this legend that accounted for Osiris\'s role as a god of the dead and ruler of the Egyptian underworld.  He was associated with funerary rituals, at first only with those of the Egyptian monarch, later with those of the populace in general.  The pharaoh was believed to become Osiris after his death.  Although he was regarded as a guarantor of continued existence in the afterlife, Osiris also had a darker, demonic aspect associated with the physiological processes of death and decay, and reflecting the fear Egyptians had of death in spite of their belief in an afterlife.  Osiris was also a judge of the dead, referred to as the \'lord of \'aat\' (i.e. of divine law).');
GodThing[147] = new CreateGod('Pachet','@','Egyptian goddess of the desert.');
GodThing[148] = new CreateGod('Petbe','@','Egyptian god of retaliation.');
GodThing[149] = new CreateGod('Petesuchos','@','Egyptian crocodile-god.');
GodThing[150] = new CreateGod('Pharaoh','@','Egyptian god-king(s).');
GodThing[151] = new CreateGod('Ptah','@','Egyptian creator god.  Also a god of artisans, designers, builders,metal workers, architects and masons, whose skills he was said to have created.  His major cult center was at Memphis.  At Memphis and Thebes his consort was the lioness goddess Sakhmet.  Together  with Sakhmet\'s son Nefertum, they formed the \'Memphite triad\'.  His sacred animal was the bull, and he was particularly represented by the Apis Bull at Memphis, which acted as an intermediary between the god and humankind.  He was depicted in human form, tightly wrapped like a mummy, with shaven head or wearing a close fitting skull cap, holding the scepter of dominion composed of a \'djed\' staff topped by the ankh (life) symbol. According to one tradition (the Memphite creation myth), Ptah was the primary motive force in creation, thinking and speaking the cosmos into existence. (Elsewhere, he was said to have created the cosmos out of mud.)  In this tradition, propagated by his priesthood, it was Ptah who was pre-eminent among the gods.  He was said to have invented the \'opening of the mouth\' ceremony restoring the faculties of life to the corpse by performing it on the mouths of the gods when he created them.');
GodThing[152] = new CreateGod('Ptah-Seker-Osiris','@','Egyptian composite funerary god. ');
GodThing[153] = new CreateGod('Qebhsnuf','Qebehsenuf','Egyptian son of Horus, Canopic guardian of the viscera after mummification.  He was represented as a mummified man with the head of a falcon.');
GodThing[154] = new CreateGod('Ra','Re','Egyptian sun god.  See Re.');
GodThing[155] = new CreateGod('Rat-taui','@','Egyptian goddess.');
GodThing[156] = new CreateGod('Re','Ra','Egyptian sun god and creator god.  He was usually depicted in human form with a falcon head, crowned with the sun disc and  the uraeus (a stylized representation of the sacred cobra).  The sun itself was taken to be either his body or his eye.  He was said to traverse the sky each day in a solar barque and pass through the underworld each night on another solar barque to reappear in the east each morning.  His principal cult centre was at Heliopolis (\"sun city\"), near modern Cairo.  Re was also considered to be an underworld god, closely associated in this respect with Osiris.  In this capacity he was depicted as a ram-headed figure. By the third millennium B.C. Re\'s prominence had already become such that the pharaohs took to styling themselves \"sons of Re\".  After death, the Egyptian monarch was said to ascend into the sky to join the entourage of the sun god.  According to the Heliopolitan cosmology, Re was said to have created himself, either out of a primordial lotus blossom, or on the mound that emerged from the primeval waters.  He then created Shu (air) and Tefnut (moisture), who in turn engendered the earth god Geb and the sky goddess Nut.  Re was said to have created humankind from his own tears and the gods Hu (authority) and Sia (mind) from blood drawn from his own penis.  Re was often combined with other deities to enhance the prestige of the latter, as in Re-Atum, Amun-Re, or in the formula \"Re in Osiris, Osiris in Re\".');
GodThing[157] = new CreateGod('Renenutet','Ernutet, Renenet','Egyptian cobra goddess.  Depicted either as a hooded cobra or in human form with the head of a cobra.  Her name seems to have the meaning of nurturing or raising a child, and she was both a goddess associated with motherhood and the tutelary deity of the pharaoh.  Her gaze was said to have the power to vanquish all enemies and also to ensure the fertility of the crops and the bounty of the harvest.  She was associated with the magical properties believed to inhere in the linen bandages that wrapped the dead and was known at Edfu as the \'mistress of the robes\'.  She had an important cult center in the fertile Faiyum region, where she was closely associated with the local crocodile god Sobek.  In the Greco-Roman period she was worshipped as the goddess Hermouthis, in which form she came to be syncretized with Isis.');
GodThing[158] = new CreateGod('Renpet','@','Egyptian goddess of youth and spingtime. Renpet in ancient Egyptian means year. Wep-renpet would mean \'opening of the year\' or spring. Sometimes she is compared to the star Sirius which reappears above the horizen in Egypt once a year just before spring. So when the star appeared farmers expected the Nile to rise next and revitalize their fields for planting of the crops. A picture of her (not on the net) is a woman wearing a palm frond.');
GodThing[159] = new CreateGod('Reret','@','Egyptian hippopotamus goddess.');
GodThing[160] = new CreateGod('Resheph','Reshpu','Egyptian version of the Sumerian Aleyin/Amurru, originally a vegetation god, regarded by Egyptians as a warrior.');
GodThing[161] = new CreateGod('Ruti','@','Pair of lions worshipped in Egyptian Letopolis.');
GodThing[162] = new CreateGod('Saa','@','Egyptian personification of intelligence.');
GodThing[163] = new CreateGod('Sachmet','@','Egyptian goddess of war.');
GodThing[164] = new CreateGod('Sai','Greek Psais','Egyptian personification of destiny.');
GodThing[165] = new CreateGod('Sakhmet','Sachmet, Sekhmet','\"The Powerful One\".  Egyptian lioness goddess.  Daughter of the sun god Re.  At Memphis she formed part of the Memphite triad together with Ptah as her consort and Nefertum (otherwise the son of Bastet) as her son.  Depicted as a lioness or in human form with the head of a lioness.  She was generally shown crowned by the solar disk,holding the ankh (\"life\") symbol or a scepter in the shape of a papyrus reed.  At Thebes Sakhmet came to be syncretized with Mut, the consort of the Theban sun god Amun.  She had a warlike aspect,and was said to breath fire at the enemies of the pharaoh.  Like the goddess Hathor, Sakhmet could become the \'eye of Re\', an agent of the sun god\'s punishment.  She was believed to be the bearer of plague and pestilence, but in a more benign aspect she was called upon in spells and amulets to ward off disease.');
GodThing[166] = new CreateGod('Sarapis','Serapis','Syncretic god of Ptolemaic Egypt and later a deity worshipped throughout the Roman Empire.  Sarapis was the Greek form of Osiris-Apis, a deity who combined the attributes of the bull god Apis and the underworld god Osiris.  To this the Hellenistic rulers of Egypt added characteristics taken from Greek deities such as Zeus,Dionysos, Hades, Helios and Asklepios to create a universal god. Depicted in human form with curly hair and crowned with a basket-shaped headdress known as a kalathos.  His cult was taken over by Ptolemy I Soter, who elevated Sarapis to the status of a national god.  His major cult center was Alexandria, home of the famous temple known as the Sarapeum.');
GodThing[167] = new CreateGod('Satet','@','Egyptian goddess of first cataract of Nile.');
GodThing[168] = new CreateGod('Satis','Greek form, also Sati',' Egyptian Satjit or Satet;Egyptian goddess whose primary role was that of a guardian of Egypt\'s southern (Nubian) frontier, killing enemies of the pharaoh with her arrows.  As \'Queen of Elephantine\" she figures as the consort of Khnum and the mother of Anuket, the three sometimes being referred to as the \'Elephantine triad\'.  Depicted in human form wearing the tall conical white crown of Upper Egypt bounded on either side by plumes or antelope horns, holding a scepter and the ankh (\"life\") symbol.  She had a major sanctuary on the island of Sahel near Elephantine (near modern Aswan).  Satis was also associated with the annual inundation of the Nile.');
GodThing[169] = new CreateGod('Sechat-Hor','@','Egyptian cow-goddess.');
GodThing[170] = new CreateGod('Sed','@','Egyptian \'saviour\' god.');
GodThing[171] = new CreateGod('Sentait','@','Egyptian cow goddess.');
GodThing[172] = new CreateGod('Sepa','Sep','Egyptian chthonic god.');
GodThing[173] = new CreateGod('Septu','Sopd, Sopdu','Egyptian war god.');
GodThing[174] = new CreateGod('Serapis','Sarapis','National god of Ptolemaic Egypt.  The Egyptian name for the Apis Bull of the Serapeum at Sakkarah.  A great temple at Alexandria was built in honour of Serapis.');
GodThing[175] = new CreateGod('Serket','Selket, Selkis, Selchis, Selquet',' Egyptian Serket hetyt;\"She who causes the throat to breath\".  Egyptian scorpion goddess.  Depicted in human form with a scorpion-shaped headdress, or with a  scorpion body and a human head.  She was early a tutelary deity of the Egyptian monarchs.  Serket was associated with mortuary rites who helped guard the canopic jars in which the viscera of the dead were placed.  From this association she came to be a tutelary goddess of the dead.  She was called upon in Egyptian magic to avert venemous bites and stings.');
GodThing[176] = new CreateGod('Seshat','Sesat, Sesheta','Egyptian goddess of writing.  Also associated with libraries,letters, archives and historical records.  Depicted in human form with a star or rosette above her head, wearing a leopard-skin robe,holding a scepter made of a notched palm branch on which she recorded the jubilee years.  Seshat assisted the pharaoh mark out the boundaries of a temple in a ritual known as \'stretching the cord\'.');
GodThing[177] = new CreateGod('Sesmu','@','Egyptian god of oil and wine pressing.');
GodThing[178] = new CreateGod('Shait','@','Egyptian goddess of destiny.');
GodThing[179] = new CreateGod('Tanen','Tathenen','Egyptian: Ptah in an aspect of an earth god.');
GodThing[180] = new CreateGod('Seth','Set, Setekh, Setesh, Seti, Sutekh, Setech, Sutech','Egyptian god of chaos who embodied the principle of hostility if not of outright evil.  He was associated with foreign lands and was the adversary of the god Osiris.  Seth was usually depicted in human form with a head of indeterminate origin, though said to resemble that of an aardvark.  He had a curved snout, erect square-tipped ears and a long forked tail.  Sometimes he was represented in entirely animal form with a body similar to that of a greyhound. He was said to be the son either of Nut and Geb or of Nut and Ra,and the brother of Isis, Osiris and Nephthys.  Nephthys was sometimes given as his consort, although he is more commonly associated with the foreign, Semitic goddesses Astarte and Anat.  Despite his reputation, he had an important sanctuary at Ombos in Upper Egypt, his reputed birthplace, and his cult was also prominent in the north-eastern region of the Nile delta. For a time during the third millenium BC, Seth replaced Horus as the tutelary deity of the pharaohs.  However, the story of Seth\'s murder of Osiris and subsequent war with Horus gained currency and Horus was restored to his original status.  The war with Horus lasted eighty years, during which Seth tore out the left eye his adversary and Horus tore out Seth\'s foreleg and testicles.  Horus eventually emerged victorious, or was deemed the victor by a council of the gods, and thus became the rightful ruler of the kingdoms of both Upper and Lower Egypt.  Seth was forced to return the eye of Horus and was himself either castrated or, in some versions, killed.  In some versions Seth then went to live with the sun god Re, where he became the voice of the thunder.  In the Book of the Dead Seth was referred to as the \"lord of the northern sky\",and held responsible for storms and cloudy weather.  Seth protected Re during his night voyage through the underworld against the Apophis-snake.  On the other hand, Seth was a peril for ordinary Egyptians in the underworld, where he was said seize the souls of the unwary.  Among the animals sacred to Seth were the desert oryx,crocodile,boar, and the hippopotamus in its aspect as a destroyer of boats and of planted fields.  The pig was a taboo in Seth\'s cult.  The Greeks later equated Seth with their demon-god Typhon.');
GodThing[181] = new CreateGod('Shu','Su',' Greek Sos;Primordial Egyptian god of the air and supporter of the sky.  In the Heliopolitan creation myth, Shu was, with his sister Tefnut,one of the first deities created by the sun god Atum, either fromhis semen or from the mucus of his nostrils.  Tefnut then became his consort, giving birth to the sky goddess Nut and the earth god Geb.  Shu separated Geb and Nut (heaven and earth) by interposing himself between them.  Depicted in human form wearing an ostrich feather (the hieroglyph for his name), with his arms raised to support the goddess Nut above the supine form of Geb.');
GodThing[182] = new CreateGod('Sobek','Sebek,Sebeq,Sebk,Sabk, Greek:Suchos','Egyptian crocodile god.  Sobek symbolized the might of the Egyptian pharaohs.  Son of Neith.  Depicted as a crocodile or in human form with the head of a crocodile, crowned either by a pair of plumes or sometimes by a combination of the solar disk and the uraeus (cobra).  His cult was widespread, although the Faiyum was particularly noted as a center of his worship, where one of the towns came to be called \'Crocodilopolis\' by the Greeks.  Kom Ombo (north of modern Aswan) and Thebes in Upper Egypt later became centers of his cult as well.');
GodThing[183] = new CreateGod('Sokar','Seker',' Greek Socharis, Sokaris;Egyptian funerary god of the Memphis necropolis.  Depicted in human form with a hawk\'s head.  As early as the Old Kingdom, Sokar came to be regarded as a manifestation of the dead Osiris at Abydos in Upper Egypt.  Also in the Old Kingdom, he came to be syncretized with Ptah as Ptah-Sokar, in which form he took the lioness goddess Sakhmet as his consort.  In the Middle Kingdom, the three were sometimes merged in the form Ptah-Sokar-Osiris.  Sokar was associated with the manufacture of various objects used in embalming and in funerary rituals.  He became a god of the craftsmen working in the necropolis at Memphis and ultimately a patron deity of the necropolis itself.  He also played a prominent role at Thebes where he was depicted on the royal tombs.  An important annual festival was held in his honour at Thebes.  The festival celebrated the resurrection of Osiris in the form of Sokar and the continuity of the Egyptian monarchy.  At this festival his image was carried in an elaborate boat known as the \'henu\'.');
GodThing[184] = new CreateGod('Somtus','Harsomtus','Egyptian god of Dendara.');
GodThing[185] = new CreateGod('Sothis','Greek form: Egyptian Sopdet','Egyptian goddess who personified the Dog Star, Sirius.  The appearance of Sirius at dawn in July (the \'heliacal rising\') heralded the annual inundation of the Nile.  She naturally became associated with the fertility and prosperity resulting from the annual floods.  Depicted in human form wearing the tall conical white crown of Upper Egypt surmounted by a star.  In a fourth century BC papyrus, Isis identifies herself with Sothis as she laments the death of Osiris and vows to follow him in his manifestation as the constellation Orion.');
GodThing[186] = new CreateGod('Sopedu','Sopdu','Egyptian god of the eastern frontier.  Depicted either in the form of a falcon or as a Bedouin crowned with tall plumes.    Sopedu was the god of the eastern desert, of the Sinai peninsula and of the turquoise mines in the Sinai.  In the Pyramid Texts he took on an astral aspect, impregnating Isis in her manifestation as the star Sirius, whose appearance in July heralded the annual inundation of the Nile.  Isis subsequently gave birth to the composite deity Sopedu-Horus.  His primary cult center was at Saft el-Henna in the north-eastern Nile delta.');
GodThing[187] = new CreateGod('Su','Sos','Egyptian breath of primeval god Atum.');
GodThing[188] = new CreateGod('Tasenetnofret','@','Egyptian goddess.  Consort of Horus as Haroeris.');
GodThing[189] = new CreateGod('Tatenen','Tathen, Tanen, Tenen, Ten','\"Exalted Earth\".  Primordial Egyptian god who personified the fertile silt of the Nile.  Originally an independent god at Memphis, he came to be syncretized with Ptah in his aspect as a creator god.  In this form he took on an androgynous form and was given the epithet \'father of the gods\'.  He was usually depicted in human form with ram\'s horns and wearing a feathered crown.  As a vegetation god, he could be portrayed with green skin.');
GodThing[190] = new CreateGod('Taweret','Taueret, Taurt, Apet, Opet, Greek: Thoueris, Thoeris,Toeris','\"The Great One\".  Egyptian hippopotamus goddess and protective deity of childbirth.  She was depicted with the head of a hippopotamus, the legs and arms of a lion, the tail of a crocodile,human breasts, and a swollen belly.  This appearance was meant to frighten off any spirits that might be harmful to the child.  She was often depicted holding the Sa amulet symbolizing protection.As a protective deity of childbirth she was often depicted in the company of the dwarf god Bes, who had a similar  function.  Taweret was most popular among ordinary Egyptians as a protectress. Pregnant women commonly wore amulets bearing the goddess\'s image.');
GodThing[191] = new CreateGod('Tefnut','Tefnet, Tefenet, Greek Tphenis','Primeval Egyptian goddess personifying moisture, particularly in the forms of dew, rain and mist.  According to the Heolopolitan cosmology, she was the daughter of Atum (sun), the sister and wife of Shu (air), and the mother of Geb (earth) and Nut (sky).  Tefnut could take on the role of the \'eye of Re\' (Re being another form of her sun god father), in which case she was depicted as a lioness or in human form with the head of a lioness.  She could also be depicted as a snake coiled about a scepter.  In the Pyramid Texts she was said to create pure water from her vagina.  Her principal sanctuary was at Heliopolis.  Tefnut and Shu were also worshipped as a pair of lions at Leontopolis in the Nile delta.');
GodThing[192] = new CreateGod('Tenenit','@','Egyptian goddess of beer.');
GodThing[193] = new CreateGod('Thoth','Thot, Thout, Tehuti, Djhowtey, Djehuti, Zehuti','Egyptian moon god.  Over time, he developed as a god of wisdom, and came to be associated with magic, music, medicine, astronomy,geometry, surveying, drawing and writing.  Thoth was generally depicted in human form with the head of an ibis, wearing a crown consisting of a crescent moon topped by a moon disk.  He could also be depicted wholly as an ibis or a baboon.  Both the ibis and the baboon were sacred to him.  His principal sanctuary was at Hermopolis (Khmunu) in the Nile delta region. Thoth served as an arbiter among the gods.  In the Osirian legend, he protected Isis during her pregnancy and healed her son Horus when Seth tore out his left eye.  Thoth was later identified with the Greek god Hermes in the form of Hermes Trismegistos (\"Hermes the thrice great\"), in which form he remained popular in medieval magic and alchemy.  Thoth was also a god of the underworld, where he served as a clerk who recorded the judgments on the souls of the dead.  Alternatively, it was Thoth himself who weighed the hearts of the dead against the feather of Truth in the Hall of the Two Truths.');
GodThing[194] = new CreateGod('Tuamutef','@','Egyptian guardian god of dead person\'s stomach.');
GodThing[195] = new CreateGod('Uajyt','Uatchet, Per Uadjit, Uazet, Uto, Buto','Guardian goddess of Lower Egypt.  She was represented either as a  serpent or a vulture.');
GodThing[196] = new CreateGod('Uneg','@','Egyptian plant-god.');
GodThing[197] = new CreateGod('Unut','@','Egyptian hare-goddess.');
GodThing[198] = new CreateGod('Upuaut','Wep-wawet, Ophois','Egyptian jackal god.  He was a cemetery god at Asyut (Siut).');
GodThing[199] = new CreateGod('Urthekau','Werethekau','Egyptian supernatural powers.');
GodThing[200] = new CreateGod('Uto','Wadjet','Egyptian snake-goddess of Buto.');
GodThing[201] = new CreateGod('Wadjet','Uto','Egyptian snake goddess of Buto.');
GodThing[202] = new CreateGod('Wepwawet','Upuaut, Greek Ophois','\"Opener of the Ways\".  Egyptian jackal god.  Wepwawet had a dual role as a god of war and of the funerary cult, and could be said to  \"open the way\" both for the armies of the pharaoh and for the spirits of the dead.  He originated as a god of Upper Egypt, but his cult had spread throughout Egypt by the time of the Old Kingdom.  Depicted as a jackal or in human form with the head of a jackal, often holding the \'shedshed\', a standard which led the pharaoh to victory in war and on which the pharaoh was said to ascend into the sky after death.  Despite his origin in Upper Egypt, one inscription said that he was born in the sanctuary of the goddess Wadjet at Buto in the Nile delta.  Another inscription identified him with Horus and thus by extension with the pharaoh.  Wepwawet also symbolized the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt.  In his capacity as a funerary deity he used his adze to break open the mouth of the deceased in the \"opening of the mouth\' ceremony  which ensured that the person would have the enjoyment of all his faculties in the afterlife.  At Abydos the \'procession of Wepwawet\' opened the mysteries of Osiris as a god of the dead.');
GodThing[203] = new CreateGod('Wosyet','@','Egyptian protector goddess of the young.');
GodThing[204] = new CreateGod('Zenenet','@','Egyptian goddess of Hermonthis.');
GodThing[205] = new CreateGod('Repit','Greek: Triphus','A fierce lioness goddess  (also honored on the island of Philae in the form of an uraeus), also is the avatar Aperetiset, (the former companion of the god Min). Min and Repit form a triad with their child Kolanthes.<BR>At first, the name of the goddess lioness was only an epithet of some sacred pictures, however the goddess had for a long time been known as her dangerous aspects: as a lioness at Akhmim (9th district), and as a dangerous cobra (carving on the uraeus) on the island of Philae. Associated in the IIth S. with the god MIN of fertility, she became the mother of the young god Kolanthes. Repit took the form of the mother Aperetiset,with the hairstyle of Hathor. ');


GodThing[206] = new CreateGod("Deity Not Found!","Oh, Oh","Tell webmaster of these pages")
MaxNumberGods = 206;
}

function checkBrowser() { 
       window.status="Loading:DO NOT CLICK LINKS";
// convert all characters to lowercase to simplify testing
    var agt=navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();

    // *** BROWSER VERSION ***
    // Note: On IE5, these return 4, so use is_ie5up to detect IE5.
    var is_major = parseInt(navigator.appVersion);
    var is_minor = parseFloat(navigator.appVersion);

    // Note: Opera and WebTV spoof Navigator.  We do strict client detection.
    // If you want to allow spoofing, take out the tests for opera and webtv.
    var is_nav  = ((agt.indexOf('mozilla')!=-1) && (agt.indexOf('spoofer')==-1)
                && (agt.indexOf('compatible') == -1) && (agt.indexOf('opera')==-1)
                && (agt.indexOf('webtv')==-1) && (agt.indexOf('hotjava')==-1));
    var is_nav2 = (is_nav && (is_major == 2));
    var is_nav3 = (is_nav && (is_major == 3));
    var is_nav4 = (is_nav && (is_major == 4));
    var is_nav4up = (is_nav && (is_major >= 4));
    var is_navonly      = (is_nav && ((agt.indexOf(";nav") != -1) ||
                          (agt.indexOf("; nav") != -1)) );
    var is_nav6 = (is_nav && (is_major == 5));
    var is_nav6up = (is_nav && (is_major >= 5));
    var is_gecko = (agt.indexOf('gecko') != -1);


    var is_ie     = ((agt.indexOf("msie") != -1) && (agt.indexOf("opera") == -1));
    var is_ie3    = (is_ie && (is_major < 4));
    var is_ie4    = (is_ie && (is_major == 4) && (agt.indexOf("msie 5") == -1));
    var is_ie4up  = (is_ie && (is_major >= 4));
    var is_ie5    = (is_ie && (is_major == 4) && (agt.indexOf("msie 5.0")!=-1) );
    var is_ie5_5  = (is_ie && (is_major == 4) && (agt.indexOf("msie 5.5") !=-1));
    var is_ie5up  = (is_ie && !is_ie3 && !is_ie4);
    var is_ie5_5up =(is_ie && !is_ie3 && !is_ie4 && !is_ie5);

    // KNOWN BUG: On AOL4, returns false if IE3 is embedded browser
    // or if this is the first browser window opened.  Thus the
    // variables is_aol, is_aol3, and is_aol4 aren't 100% reliable.
    var is_aol   = (agt.indexOf("aol") != -1);
    var is_aol3  = (is_aol && is_ie3);
    var is_aol4  = (is_aol && is_ie4);
    var is_aol5  = (agt.indexOf("aol 5") != -1);
    var is_aol6  = (agt.indexOf("aol 6") != -1);

    var is_opera = (agt.indexOf("opera") != -1);
    var is_opera2 = (agt.indexOf("opera 2") != -1 || agt.indexOf("opera/2") != -1);
    var is_opera3 = (agt.indexOf("opera 3") != -1 || agt.indexOf("opera/3") != -1);
    var is_opera4 = (agt.indexOf("opera 4") != -1 || agt.indexOf("opera/4") != -1);
    var is_opera5 = (agt.indexOf("opera 5") != -1 || agt.indexOf("opera/5") != -1);
    var is_opera5up = (is_opera && !is_opera2 && !is_opera3 && !is_opera4);

    var is_webtv = (agt.indexOf("webtv") != -1); 

    var is_TVNavigator = ((agt.indexOf("navio") != -1) || (agt.indexOf("navio_aoltv") != -1)); 
    var is_AOLTV = is_TVNavigator;

    var is_hotjava = (agt.indexOf("hotjava") != -1);
    var is_hotjava3 = (is_hotjava && (is_major == 3));
    var is_hotjava3up = (is_hotjava && (is_major >= 3));

    // *** JAVASCRIPT VERSION CHECK ***
    var is_js;
    if (is_nav2 || is_ie3) is_js = 1.0;
    else if (is_nav3) is_js = 1.1;
    else if (is_opera5up) is_js = 1.3;
    else if (is_opera) is_js = 1.1;
    else if ((is_nav4 && (is_minor >= 4.05)) || is_ie4) is_js = 1.2;
    else if ((is_nav4 && (is_minor > 4.05)) || is_ie5) is_js = 1.3;
    else if (is_hotjava3up) is_js = 1.4;
    else if (is_nav6 || is_gecko) is_js = 1.5;
    // NOTE: In the future, update this code when newer versions of JS
    // are released. For now, we try to provide some upward compatibility
    // so that future versions of Nav and IE will show they are at
    // *least* JS 1.x capable. Always check for JS version compatibility
    // with > or >=.
    else if (is_nav6up) is_js = 1.5;
    // NOTE: ie5up on mac is 1.4
    else if (is_ie5up) is_js = 1.3

    // HACK: no idea for other browsers; always check for JS version with > or >=
    else is_js = 0.0;

    // *** PLATFORM ***
    var is_win   = ( (agt.indexOf("win")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("16bit")!=-1) );
    // NOTE: On Opera 3.0, the userAgent string includes "Windows 95/NT4" on all
    //        Win32, so you can't distinguish between Win95 and WinNT.
    var is_win95 = ((agt.indexOf("win95")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("windows 95")!=-1));

    // is this a 16 bit compiled version?
    var is_win16 = ((agt.indexOf("win16")!=-1) || 
               (agt.indexOf("16bit")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("windows 3.1")!=-1) || 
               (agt.indexOf("windows 16-bit")!=-1) );  

    var is_win31 = ((agt.indexOf("windows 3.1")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("win16")!=-1) ||
                    (agt.indexOf("windows 16-bit")!=-1));

    var is_winme = ((agt.indexOf("win 9x 4.90")!=-1));
    var is_win2k = ((agt.indexOf("windows nt 5.0")!=-1));

    // NOTE: Reliable detection of Win98 may not be possible. It appears that:
    //       - On Nav 4.x and before you'll get plain "Windows" in userAgent.
    //       - On Mercury client, the 32-bit version will return "Win98", but
    //         the 16-bit version running on Win98 will still return "Win95".
    var is_win98 = ((agt.indexOf("win98")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("windows 98")!=-1));
    var is_winnt = ((agt.indexOf("winnt")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("windows nt")!=-1));
    var is_win32 = (is_win95 || is_winnt || is_win98 || 
                    ((is_major >= 4) && (navigator.platform == "Win32")) ||
                    (agt.indexOf("win32")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("32bit")!=-1));

    var is_os2   = ((agt.indexOf("os/2")!=-1) || 
                    (navigator.appVersion.indexOf("OS/2")!=-1) ||   
                    (agt.indexOf("ibm-webexplorer")!=-1));

    var is_mac    = (agt.indexOf("mac")!=-1);
    // hack ie5 js version for mac
    if (is_mac && is_ie5up) is_js = 1.4;
    var is_mac68k = (is_mac && ((agt.indexOf("68k")!=-1) || 
                               (agt.indexOf("68000")!=-1)));
    var is_macppc = (is_mac && ((agt.indexOf("ppc")!=-1) || 
                                (agt.indexOf("powerpc")!=-1)));

    var is_sun   = (agt.indexOf("sunos")!=-1);
    var is_sun4  = (agt.indexOf("sunos 4")!=-1);
    var is_sun5  = (agt.indexOf("sunos 5")!=-1);
    var is_suni86= (is_sun && (agt.indexOf("i86")!=-1));
    var is_irix  = (agt.indexOf("irix") !=-1);    // SGI
    var is_irix5 = (agt.indexOf("irix 5") !=-1);
    var is_irix6 = ((agt.indexOf("irix 6") !=-1) || (agt.indexOf("irix6") !=-1));
    var is_hpux  = (agt.indexOf("hp-ux")!=-1);
    var is_hpux9 = (is_hpux && (agt.indexOf("09.")!=-1));
    var is_hpux10= (is_hpux && (agt.indexOf("10.")!=-1));
    var is_aix   = (agt.indexOf("aix") !=-1);      // IBM
    var is_aix1  = (agt.indexOf("aix 1") !=-1);    
    var is_aix2  = (agt.indexOf("aix 2") !=-1);    
    var is_aix3  = (agt.indexOf("aix 3") !=-1);    
    var is_aix4  = (agt.indexOf("aix 4") !=-1);    
    var is_linux = (agt.indexOf("inux")!=-1);
    var is_sco   = (agt.indexOf("sco")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("unix_sv")!=-1);
    var is_unixware = (agt.indexOf("unix_system_v")!=-1); 
    var is_mpras    = (agt.indexOf("ncr")!=-1); 
    var is_reliant  = (agt.indexOf("reliantunix")!=-1);
    var is_dec   = ((agt.indexOf("dec")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("osf1")!=-1) || 
           (agt.indexOf("dec_alpha")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("alphaserver")!=-1) || 
           (agt.indexOf("ultrix")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("alphastation")!=-1)); 
    var is_sinix = (agt.indexOf("sinix")!=-1);
    var is_freebsd = (agt.indexOf("freebsd")!=-1);
    var is_bsd = (agt.indexOf("bsd")!=-1);
    var is_unix  = ((agt.indexOf("x11")!=-1) || is_sun || is_irix || is_hpux || 
                 is_sco ||is_unixware || is_mpras || is_reliant || 
                 is_dec || is_sinix || is_aix || is_linux || is_bsd || is_freebsd);

    var is_vms   = ((agt.indexOf("vax")!=-1) || (agt.indexOf("openvms")!=-1));


             if (is_js <= 1.1) {
    	
                  alert("Your browser does not have a new enough javascript to view this page, your version of javascript is: " + is_js + ". It must be at least 1.2 for this page to be handled properly.");
            		window.location = unescape("mythhome.htm");
		}
		else 
			{	initGod();		
	window.status="Done-click links";
			}

            
             }

function MakeGodPage(NumberOfGod) {

if ( NumberOfGod < 1 ) {
 NumberOfGod = MaxNumberGods;
}
if ( MaxNumberGods - 1 < NumberOfGod ) {
 NumberOfGod = MaxNumberGods;
}
var content = '<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>' + GodThing[NumberOfGod].Name + '\'s Page</TITLE>' +
'</head><body background="tan_pape.gif" text="black" link="#0000BB" vlink="#FF00BB">' + 
'<IMG ALIGN="LEFT" SRC="mythtext.gif" WIDTH="143" HEIGHT="75" ALT="[MYTHHOME THUMBNAIL IMAGE]"></P>' + 
'<I><H6>&copy; 1995-1999 Untangle Incorporated</H6>' + '<INPUT TYPE="BUTTON" VALUE="print"  ONCLICK="if (window.print) window.print();"  >' +
'</I><P ALIGN="RIGHT">Last Updated: ' + NowDate() + '</P><BR><HR ALIGN="LEFT" >' + '<FONT COLOR="black"><center><h1>' + GodThing[NumberOfGod].Name + '</h1></center></FONT>' + 
'<CENTER><H4><I>( ' + GodThing[NumberOfGod].OtherName + ' )</I> </H4></CENTER> <CENTER><H3> ' + GodThing[NumberOfGod].Description + ' </H3></CENTER><P>' + 
'<P><IMG SRC="bann04.gif" ALIGN="LEFT" WIDTH="100%" HEIGHT="2%"  ALT="Banner Graphic"><BR></P>' + 
'<P>Click <A HREF="contact.html">here</A> if you want to drop us a line or two.</P>' + 
'<P>Return to <A HREF="mythhome.htm">main page</A></P>' + 
'<P><IMG SRC="bann04.gif" ALIGN="LEFT" WIDTH="100%" HEIGHT="2%"  ALT="Banner Graphic"><BR>' + 
'</BODY> </HTML>'
var GodName = (GodThing[NumberOfGod].Name);
var GodReplace=/(-|\s|\'|\(|\))+/g;
var WithThis = "";
var GodName2=GodName.replace(GodReplace,WithThis);
var win = window.open("",GodName2, "width=400,height=400,resizable=yes,scrollbars=yes");
win.document.open,("text/html","replace");
win.document.write(content);
win.document.close();


} 

