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Nehekhara Necropotence
<b>Duamutef</b> was <b>one of the Four sons of Horus</b> and a funerary god who protected the stomach and small intestines of mummified corpses, kept in a canopic jar. Duamutef is represented as a mummified man with the head of a <b>jackal</b>. His name is generally transcribed as Duamutef, and means 'Adoring His Mother'.
<b>Amset</b> was a funerary deity, <b>one of the Four sons of Horus</b>, who were associated with the canopic jars, specifically the one which contained the liver. Unlike his brothers, Amset was not associated with any animal and was always depicted as <b>human</b>. The early form of Isis was considered his protector.
<b>Kebechsenuef</b>, who's name probably means something like 'My Brothers' Libation', was <b>one of the sons of Horus</b> in Egyptian mythology, the god of protection and of the West. In the preparation of mummies, his canopic jar was used for the intestines. He is seen as a mummy with a <b>falcon</b>.
<b>Hapi</b> was <b>one of the Four sons of Horus</b> depicted in funerary literature as protecting the throne of Osiris in the Underworld. Hapi is depicted as a <b>baboon</b>-headed mummified human on funerary furniture and especially the canopic jars that held the organs of the deceased. Hapi's jar held the lungs. Hapi was also the protector of the North.
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