Horus: Difference between revisions
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{{character stub}} | {{character stub}} | ||
{{Infobox Individual | {{Infobox Individual | ||
|main alias = Harpocrates | |main alias = Harpocrates, Eliza | ||
|image = Words from Nine Divinities Horus.jpg | |image = Words from Nine Divinities Horus.jpg | ||
|species = Osirian | |species = Osirian | ||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
|first mention = Pyramids of Mars (TV story) | |first mention = Pyramids of Mars (TV story) | ||
|first = Words from Nine Divinities (audio story) | |first = Words from Nine Divinities (audio story) | ||
| | |appearances = {{appears}} | ||
| | |voice actor = Jane Lesley | ||
| | |other voice actor = [[Gabriel Woolf]] | ||
}} | |species2=Human}} | ||
'''Horus''' was an [[ | '''Horus''' was an [[Osirian]] related to [[Osiris]] and [[Sutekh]]. By one account, he was the hybrid formed when Osiris' [[biodata]] was merged with that of Cousin [[Christine Summerfield|Eliza]] and modified by [[Lolita]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Body Politic (audio story)|Body Politic]]'') Horus was also called '''Harpocrates''', [[god]] of Silence. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Head of State (novel)|Head of State]]'') | ||
== | == History == | ||
=== Genesis === | |||
A Sutekh-possessed [[Marcus Scarman]] claimed that Horus was Sutekh's "brother", just as Marcus was brother to [[Laurence Scarman|Laurence]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'') However, there were different accounts about what precisely this entailed. One simply treated Horus as biological brother of Sutekh; after Sutekh destroyed the Osirian homeworld [[Phaester Osiris]], Horus swore to show himself better than his brother and sought justice, instead of revenge. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Enigma of Sisterhood (short story)|The Enigma of Sisterhood]]'') | |||
By | However, other accounts agreed that Sutekh's actual brother was [[Osiris]], whom Sutekh had betrayed, with Horus being a new identity adopted by the essence of Osiris as it returned in the body of a mortal. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Sands of Time (novel)|The Sands of Time]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Body Politic (audio story)|Body Politic]]'') By one such account, Horus was the psi-child produced when Sutekh stranded Osiris in space and Osiris projected part of his mind into the pilot of [[Isis]]' search ship. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Sands of Time (novel)|The Sands of Time]]'') | ||
According to another, after [[Osiris]] was killed by [[Sutekh]], [[Justine McManus|Justine il-Isis]] of [[Faction Paradox]] sought to nullify Sutekh's claim to the Osirian throne by arranging for his resurrection. She searched for pieces of every part of Osiris' body and [[biodata]], which she then brought back to [[Anubis]], the most skilled flesh-sculptor in the Osirian Court, so that he could recreate a new body for Osiris. | |||
== | However, vital pieces of his [[biodata]] were missing. As Justine had unwittingly contaminated the rest of Osiris's biodata with [[Faction Paradox]] influences while she collected it, only another memebr of the Faction was a usable donour; [[Christine Summerfield|Cousin Eliza]] of [[Faction Paradox]] offered herself. She was placed in a [[Loom|tank]] and "pumped full" of the recovered Osiris biodata. [[Lolita]] covertly added a few drops of her own [[blood]] to the tank, in the hope that she could use this connection to control Osiris later on. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Body Politic (audio story)|Body Politic]]'') | ||
A tribunal was convened to decide whether Horus or | |||
The resulting composite being had Osiris's essence, but it took a while for his memories and his full personality to reassert themselves, with the "resurrected Osiris" still acting and speaking like Eliza and possessing her memories also. When he was presented to the Osirians, they perceived Osiris's essence within him, but were reluctant to consider him quite the same person. They dubbed him "Horus", a name which, in their tongue, signified the idea of being "between two spheres". ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Words from Nine Divinities (audio story)|Words from Nine Divinities]]'') | |||
=== Civil war against Sutekh === | |||
A tribunal was convened to decide whether Horus or Sutekh should inherit the throne. It was judged by [[Geb (Ozymandias)|Geb]], father of Sutekh and Osiris. The tribunal ended when Horus accepted Sutekh's challenge of ritual combat to decide the matter. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Ozymandias (audio story)|Ozymandias]]'') Horus and [[Nephthys]] took their barge to a location underneath the [[Mediterranean Sea]], where they prepared for battle against Sutekh and gathered an army of over seven-hundred Osirian warriors. However, when it became time to strike, Horus led his army to [[the Homeworld]], where they "dealt with" [[Lolita]]. | |||
The trap they had devised for Sutekh could only function if Osiris himself died also. To achieve this, after attacking Lolita, Osiris deactivated his biodata from within Horus so that Justine could mortally wound Eliza's body; Eliza then pretended to be Horus in the [[Temple of Geb]] and goaded Sutekh into permanently killing her. | |||
Horus and Justine told the official records that Horus and his warriors had vanished while defeating Sutekh; ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Judgment of Sutekh (audio story)|The Judgment of Sutekh]]'') the [[Fourth Doctor]] shared this legend with [[Sarah Jane Smith]], saying, "The wars of the gods entered into mythology. The whole of Egyptian culture is founded upon the Osiran pattern." Sarah recognised the name from the 740 gods recorded in the tomb of [[Thutmose III]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'') | Horus and Justine told the official records that Horus and his warriors had vanished while defeating Sutekh; ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Judgment of Sutekh (audio story)|The Judgment of Sutekh]]'') the [[Fourth Doctor]] shared this legend with [[Sarah Jane Smith]], saying, "The wars of the gods entered into mythology. The whole of Egyptian culture is founded upon the Osiran pattern." Sarah recognised the name from the 740 gods recorded in the tomb of [[Thutmose III]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'') | ||
=== Later rule and death === | |||
When preparing to have Eliza get their shared body killed by Sutekh, Horus seemed unconcerned about his own impending demise, noting that it wouldn't be the first time he had died. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Judgment of Sutekh (audio story)|The Judgment of Sutekh]]'') Indeed, one account showed that Horus, now in a body with a [[cow]]'s head, ruled the Osirians in earnest for some time. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Scarab of Death (short story)|Scarab of Death]]'') Belying Sutekh's claim that Horus, like the Fourth Doctor, considered all sapient life to be his kith, ([[TV]]: ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'') he was a cruel dictator who conquered and oppressed more than a hundred inhabited [[planet|worlds]]. Wherever he went, he brought [[plague]] and [[famine]]; he was known to nurture pacifist societies and then unleash vicious killers on them for his own amusement. | |||
Following the defeat of Sutekh, Horus placed himself in [[suspended animation]] in the [[Black Pyramid]] on [[Beta Osiris]], Phaester Osiris's MooN. However, the [[cryogenic]] systems failed in the [[16th century]]. The [[Fourth Doctor]] and Sarah found his [[body|corpse]] in the [[2650s]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Scarab of Death (short story)|Scarab of Death]]'') | |||
== | === Legacy === | ||
He was worshipped by many cultures. The [[Egypt]]ians of [[Earth]] | He was worshipped by many cultures. The [[Egypt]]ians of [[Earth]] worshipped him amongst the pantheon of gods, many of whom were named after Osirans. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[GodEngine (novel)|GodEngine]]'') The [[Cult of the Black Pyramid]] also worshipped Horus and dismissed Sutekh as a false god. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Scarab of Death (short story)|Scarab of Death]]'') | ||
The [[Ice Warrior|native Martians]] also | The [[Ice Warrior|native Martians]] also worshipped Horus. Forming the [[Order of Oras|Holy Order of Oras]], they followed the teachings of the ''[[Book of Oras]]''. The Order's teachings were of a non-violent nature and asked its followers to abandon such means. The ''[[Ninth Book of Oras]]'' was the ''Rebirth of the Father''. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[GodEngine (novel)|GodEngine]]'') | ||
When inducting his earlier self into the Faction, [[Richard Francis Burton]] made himself swear by "Horus, the reborn child from whose sacrifice our Faction owes its own rebirth". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Head of State (novel)|Head of State]]'') | When inducting his earlier self into the Faction, [[Richard Francis Burton]] made himself swear by "Horus, the reborn child from whose sacrifice our Faction owes its own rebirth". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Head of State (novel)|Head of State]]'') | ||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
Horus is alternately portrayed as both Sutekh's nephew and brother in different sources. While ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'' and ''[[The Enigma of Sisterhood (short story)|The Enigma of Sisterhood]]'' state they are brothers, ''[[The Sands of Time]]'' | Horus is alternately portrayed as both Sutekh's nephew and brother in different sources. While ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'' and ''[[The Enigma of Sisterhood (short story)|The Enigma of Sisterhood]]'' state they are brothers, ''[[The Sands of Time]]'' depicts Horus as the son of Osiris, brother of Sutekh. ''[[Body Politic (audio story)|Body Politic]]'' reconciled this contradiction by proposing that Horus was a separate entity from, but had the memories of, Sutekh's brother Osiris; in ''[[Going Once, Going Twice (short story)|Going Once, Going Twice]]'', Horus refers to Sutekh as his brother, but Sutekh refuses to acknowledge Horus as such. | ||
The ambiguity of the [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]] characters' relationships reflects that of the real world Egyptian deities they are based upon, who are alternately described as brothers or uncle and nephew in real world myth (to the extent that some scholars allege the existence of two separate gods by the name of "Horus"). | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{fpx}} | {{fpx}} | ||
{{Gods}} | |||
{{NameSort}} | {{NameSort}} | ||
[[Category:Individual Osirans]] | [[Category:Individual Osirans]] | ||
[[Category:Supposed deities from the real world]] | [[Category:Supposed deities from the real world]] | ||
[[Category:Egyptian deities]] | [[Category:Egyptian deities]] | ||
[[Category:Non-cisgender individuals]] |
Latest revision as of 08:58, 25 June 2024
Horus was an Osirian related to Osiris and Sutekh. By one account, he was the hybrid formed when Osiris' biodata was merged with that of Cousin Eliza and modified by Lolita. (AUDIO: Body Politic) Horus was also called Harpocrates, god of Silence. (PROSE: Head of State)
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
Genesis[[edit] | [edit source]]
A Sutekh-possessed Marcus Scarman claimed that Horus was Sutekh's "brother", just as Marcus was brother to Laurence. (TV: Pyramids of Mars) However, there were different accounts about what precisely this entailed. One simply treated Horus as biological brother of Sutekh; after Sutekh destroyed the Osirian homeworld Phaester Osiris, Horus swore to show himself better than his brother and sought justice, instead of revenge. (PROSE: The Enigma of Sisterhood)
However, other accounts agreed that Sutekh's actual brother was Osiris, whom Sutekh had betrayed, with Horus being a new identity adopted by the essence of Osiris as it returned in the body of a mortal. (PROSE: The Sands of Time, AUDIO: Body Politic) By one such account, Horus was the psi-child produced when Sutekh stranded Osiris in space and Osiris projected part of his mind into the pilot of Isis' search ship. (PROSE: The Sands of Time)
According to another, after Osiris was killed by Sutekh, Justine il-Isis of Faction Paradox sought to nullify Sutekh's claim to the Osirian throne by arranging for his resurrection. She searched for pieces of every part of Osiris' body and biodata, which she then brought back to Anubis, the most skilled flesh-sculptor in the Osirian Court, so that he could recreate a new body for Osiris.
However, vital pieces of his biodata were missing. As Justine had unwittingly contaminated the rest of Osiris's biodata with Faction Paradox influences while she collected it, only another memebr of the Faction was a usable donour; Cousin Eliza of Faction Paradox offered herself. She was placed in a tank and "pumped full" of the recovered Osiris biodata. Lolita covertly added a few drops of her own blood to the tank, in the hope that she could use this connection to control Osiris later on. (AUDIO: Body Politic)
The resulting composite being had Osiris's essence, but it took a while for his memories and his full personality to reassert themselves, with the "resurrected Osiris" still acting and speaking like Eliza and possessing her memories also. When he was presented to the Osirians, they perceived Osiris's essence within him, but were reluctant to consider him quite the same person. They dubbed him "Horus", a name which, in their tongue, signified the idea of being "between two spheres". (AUDIO: Words from Nine Divinities)
Civil war against Sutekh[[edit] | [edit source]]
A tribunal was convened to decide whether Horus or Sutekh should inherit the throne. It was judged by Geb, father of Sutekh and Osiris. The tribunal ended when Horus accepted Sutekh's challenge of ritual combat to decide the matter. (AUDIO: Ozymandias) Horus and Nephthys took their barge to a location underneath the Mediterranean Sea, where they prepared for battle against Sutekh and gathered an army of over seven-hundred Osirian warriors. However, when it became time to strike, Horus led his army to the Homeworld, where they "dealt with" Lolita.
The trap they had devised for Sutekh could only function if Osiris himself died also. To achieve this, after attacking Lolita, Osiris deactivated his biodata from within Horus so that Justine could mortally wound Eliza's body; Eliza then pretended to be Horus in the Temple of Geb and goaded Sutekh into permanently killing her.
Horus and Justine told the official records that Horus and his warriors had vanished while defeating Sutekh; (AUDIO: The Judgment of Sutekh) the Fourth Doctor shared this legend with Sarah Jane Smith, saying, "The wars of the gods entered into mythology. The whole of Egyptian culture is founded upon the Osiran pattern." Sarah recognised the name from the 740 gods recorded in the tomb of Thutmose III. (TV: Pyramids of Mars)
Later rule and death[[edit] | [edit source]]
When preparing to have Eliza get their shared body killed by Sutekh, Horus seemed unconcerned about his own impending demise, noting that it wouldn't be the first time he had died. (AUDIO: The Judgment of Sutekh) Indeed, one account showed that Horus, now in a body with a cow's head, ruled the Osirians in earnest for some time. (PROSE: Scarab of Death) Belying Sutekh's claim that Horus, like the Fourth Doctor, considered all sapient life to be his kith, (TV: Pyramids of Mars) he was a cruel dictator who conquered and oppressed more than a hundred inhabited worlds. Wherever he went, he brought plague and famine; he was known to nurture pacifist societies and then unleash vicious killers on them for his own amusement.
Following the defeat of Sutekh, Horus placed himself in suspended animation in the Black Pyramid on Beta Osiris, Phaester Osiris's MooN. However, the cryogenic systems failed in the 16th century. The Fourth Doctor and Sarah found his corpse in the 2650s. (PROSE: Scarab of Death)
Legacy[[edit] | [edit source]]
He was worshipped by many cultures. The Egyptians of Earth worshipped him amongst the pantheon of gods, many of whom were named after Osirans. (PROSE: GodEngine) The Cult of the Black Pyramid also worshipped Horus and dismissed Sutekh as a false god. (PROSE: Scarab of Death)
The native Martians also worshipped Horus. Forming the Holy Order of Oras, they followed the teachings of the Book of Oras. The Order's teachings were of a non-violent nature and asked its followers to abandon such means. The Ninth Book of Oras was the Rebirth of the Father. (PROSE: GodEngine)
When inducting his earlier self into the Faction, Richard Francis Burton made himself swear by "Horus, the reborn child from whose sacrifice our Faction owes its own rebirth". (PROSE: Head of State)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Horus is alternately portrayed as both Sutekh's nephew and brother in different sources. While Pyramids of Mars and The Enigma of Sisterhood state they are brothers, The Sands of Time depicts Horus as the son of Osiris, brother of Sutekh. Body Politic reconciled this contradiction by proposing that Horus was a separate entity from, but had the memories of, Sutekh's brother Osiris; in Going Once, Going Twice, Horus refers to Sutekh as his brother, but Sutekh refuses to acknowledge Horus as such.
The ambiguity of the Doctor Who universe characters' relationships reflects that of the real world Egyptian deities they are based upon, who are alternately described as brothers or uncle and nephew in real world myth (to the extent that some scholars allege the existence of two separate gods by the name of "Horus").