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NefertumBritannica Student Article

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(also spelled Nefer-Tem), in ancient Egyptian religion and mythology, the god of each morning's creation of day, associated with the lotus flower. Nefertum was also the god of perfumes and aromatics, as the chemistry of fragrant oils was an important and highly sophisticated Egyptian science. Nefertum, along with his mother Sekhmet and his father Ptah, made up the triad of gods whose worship was centered in Memphis.

Nefertum was symbolized by the lotus because in some myths the sun was thought to emerge from a lotus flower each morning and return to a lotus at night. He was usually portrayed as a human male wearing a plumed headdress, holding a lotus scepter, a curved saber, or the ankh, symbol of life. Sometimes he was shown with the head of a lion and the body of a mummy, or standing upon a lion's back. In late texts he was associated with either Horus or Thoth. Nefertum's brother I-em-hetep (also spelled Imhotep), meaning “I come in peace,” was also the son of Ptah. I-em-hetep was a god of healing and the art of medicine; he was usually shown wearing a skullcap and carrying a roll of papyrus to symbolize study and learning. I-em-hetep was derived from an actual historical figure. Imhotep, the architect of the step pyramid of King Djoser at Saqqara, was considered so brilliant that he was deified.