Difference between revisions of "His sunsunsuns still tumble on"

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See [[scarab]]. The scarab beetle was considered sacred by the Ancient Egyptians because they believed that in its rolling dung balls around, it mirrored the way the great god Ra ("to the ra, the ra, the ra, the ra") – himself depicted as a scarab – rolled the sun across the sky each day.
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See [[scarab]]. The scarab beetle was considered sacred by the Ancient Egyptians because they believed that in its rolling dung balls around ("tumble"), it mirrored the way the great god Ra ("to the ra, the ra, the ra, the ra") – himself depicted as a scarab – rolled the sun across the sky each day.

Latest revision as of 04:03, 6 January 2006

See scarab. The scarab beetle was considered sacred by the Ancient Egyptians because they believed that in its rolling dung balls around ("tumble"), it mirrored the way the great god Ra ("to the ra, the ra, the ra, the ra") – himself depicted as a scarab – rolled the sun across the sky each day.