Wepwawet

Tradition / Region: Egyptian Mythology
Alternate Names: Upuaut, Wep-wawet, Wepawet, Apuat, Ophois
Category: Wolf


The Myth

Wepwawet is one of the oldest gods of ancient Egypt, known as the “Opener of the Ways.” He was worshiped at Asyut, a city the Greeks later called Lycopolis — the City of Wolves — and he was seen as a divine scout who clears paths for gods, kings, and the dead.

He is most often depicted as a wolf or jackal standing at the front of a procession or at the prow of the sun-boat of Ra, forever leading the way forward. In war he marches ahead of the army, opening the road to victory. In royal rituals he appears on the first standard, guiding the other sacred banners behind him and symbolizing the divine authority of the pharaoh.

The Pyramid Texts declare that the face of the king is the face of Wepwawet, for the god protects the ruler’s rise to power and accompanies him on the hunt and in battle. One inscription even proclaims that Wepwawet “opens the way” to victory itself.

Over time, his role as a war-scout expanded into the realm of death. Just as he clears the path for armies, Wepwawet also opens the roads of the Duat, the Egyptian underworld. He guides souls through the dangerous passages beyond death and stands beside funerary rites, helping the dead begin their journey into the afterlife. Because of this role, he became closely associated with Anubis and was sometimes considered his brother.

Different traditions tell of his birth in sacred places: some say he emerged from the holy shrine of the goddess Wadjet, while others claim he sprang from a tamarisk bush. In later texts he is even linked to the rising sun itself, opening the sky at the horizon as Ra ascends.

Whether leading armies, guiding kings, or escorting the dead, Wepwawet stands forever at the front — the divine pathfinder who walks first into every unknown road.


Gallery


Sources

Wepwawet.Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved March 1, 2026, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wepwawet.


Interpretive Lenses

Religious Readings
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Philosophical Readings
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Psychological Readings
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Esoteric Deep Dive
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Political / Social Readings
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