Sethian
English
Etymology
Seth + -ian
Noun
Sethian (plural Sethians)
- A member of an ancient Christian Gnostic sect who venerated the Biblical Seth, third son of Adam and Eve, depicted in their creation myths as a divine incarnation.
Adjective
Sethian (comparative more Sethian, superlative most Sethian)
- Of or relating to the Sethians
- Of or relating to the Egyptian god Set
- 1960, John Gwyn Griffiths, The conflict of Horus and Seth from Egyptian and classical sources: a study in ancient mythology, page 47:
- But if these hippopotami are Sethian, how could Apophis, a professed follower of Seth, allow this to go on in his own city of Avaris?
- 1967, Herman te Velde, Seth, God of Confusion: A Study of His Role in Egyptian Mythology and Religion (volume 6 of Probleme der Ägyptologie), page 73:
- At any rate this shows that Sekhemib-Peribsen certainly did not pass into history as a Sethian schismatic or heretic.
- 1974, Herbert Walter Fairman, The Triumph of Horus: An Ancient Egyptian Sacred Drama, page 124:
- Associated with Horus: in the Late Period the nome-sign is often written with a falcon (Horus) on the back of an oryx, which itself was a Sethian animal.
- Synonyms: Setian, Typhonic, Typhonian
- Antonyms: Osirian, Horian
- 1960, John Gwyn Griffiths, The conflict of Horus and Seth from Egyptian and classical sources: a study in ancient mythology, page 47:
Anagrams
- in haste, neatish, shetani, sthenia, thianes