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Amunet was depicted as a woman wearing the Red Crown and carrying a staff of papyrus.
In another precinct loom two colossal figures of Amun and Amunet.
She is killed by a female assassin named Amunet, who assassinates her using an asp to make the queen's death appear to be a suicide.
At Karnak, Amun's cult center, priests were dedicated to Amunet's service.
The goddess Amunet, an originally ancient goddess had one of her aspects with the symbol of the west upon her head.
Ancient Egyptians also believed that the Goddess Amunet was a personification of the West.
Her companion goddess is the Goddess Amunet, represented by the Emblem of the West.
Nearby are two huge statues of Amun and the goddess Amunet, carved in the reign of Tutankhamun.
Of the name for primordial air meaning, '(one who) is hidden', the female aspect is Amunet and the male aspect is Amun.
Iabet (Iabtet, Iab, Abet, Abtet, Ab) is a goddess in Egyptian mythology, counterpart of Amunet.
Examples of theriocephaly in the Ancient Egyptian pantheon include jackal-headed Anubis, cobra-headed Amunet, lion-headed Sekhmet (see also Sphinx), falcon-headed Horus etc.
As Amunet continued to be identified as the goddess of air, she sometimes was depicted as a winged goddess, or as a woman with a hawk, or ostrich feather, on her head.
Gods mentioned on the tomb walls include Isis, Osiris, Anubis, Hathor, Neith, Serket, Ma'at, Wadjet, Nekhbet, Amunet, Ra and Nephthys.
Other mummies bearing tattoos and dating from the end of the 2nd millennium BC have been discovered, such as the Mummy of Amunet from ancient Egypt and the mummies at Pazyryk on the Ukok Plateau.