Iat
| Iat | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Goddess of milk | ||||||
this image contains some artistic liberties, such as the color of the dress so that Wikipedia readers can tell it apart from the rest of the Egyptian Deities. | ||||||
| Name in hieroglyphs | ||||||
| Major cult center | Egypt | |||||
| Symbol | ||||||
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Iat (Ancient Egyptian: jꜣt) is an ancient Egyptian minor goddess of milk and, by association, of nurturing and childbirth.
The goddess is sparsely attested, and what little we know of her is based upon a handful of mentions in the Pyramid Texts. These include the following:
- utterance PT 211/Pyr. 131, where it is said of the deceased king, "My foster-mother is Iat, and it is she who nourishes me, it is indeed she who bore me" (unknown translator) or "The Milk-Goddess is his attendant. She is the one who will make it possible for him to live: she in fact is the one who bore Unis" (James P. Allen’s translation);
- utterance PT 578/Pyr. 1537, where the dead king is told to take on her identity in order to reach the gods in the retinue of the sun: "you should take hold of them, in your identity of the north wind; they will take account of you, in your identity of Anubis; and the gods will not go down against you, in your identity of the Milk-Goddess";
- and utterance MAFS PT 1071, which counsels, "Since you are little, you should give your arm to the Sun and sit with your arm to the Milk-Goddess."