04/11/2025
The Mound of Creation
Ahmed Osman - London
The ancient Egyptians developed a cosmology based on deep and careful observation of the natural world. Their attention was focused primarily on the rhythmic patterns of their Nilotic environment. Since time immemorial, during the hottest period of the year, the Nile River would begin to swell, and within a few weeks, it would flood the surrounding land.
This natural phenomenon was the greatest mystery confronting the ancient dwellers of the Nile Valley, who regarded it as a miracle of nature—or more aptly, as a form of natural magic. The massive influx of floodwaters, coming from Central Africa and the Ethiopian Highlands, carried rich sediment and organic material that provided Egypt with a fertile mixture of natural fertilizers so abundant that crops grew with little or no human effort.
In other words, Egypt was nourished each year by the river’s bounty—a divine gift, it seemed, from the gods themselves. From this “gift of the Nile,” upon which Egypt’s very survival depended, eventually arose a theology and cosmology that can best be described as a “natural religion.”
Egyptologists have reconstructed this ancient cosmology, giving us valuable insight into what they call the “Creation Myth.” It goes something like this:
Before anything existed, there was a liquid “Nothingness,” or more precisely, the Primeval Waters, known as Nun—a sort of primordial soup preceding the act of creation. Out of Nun emerged the Primeval Mound, upon which the First Sunrise took place.
Upon this sacred mound alighted the Bennu bird—a mythical creature similar to the phoenix—who is said to have uttered the first sound. In doing so, it set time into motion and initiated the activity of the universe: the cycles of the celestial bodies, the rhythms of nature, the changing of the seasons, and, most importantly, the cycle of the Nile and the life-giving cycle of agriculture and husbandry.