Horus and Bian Que

1. Horus
In ancient Egypt, there was such a great deity, Horus. Legend has it that he wears an Egyptian crown, a short linen skirt around his waist, a symbol of life in his left hand, and a cane-shaped charging treasure in his right hand.
As the name suggests, the Eye of Horus is the eye of Horus, also known as the eye of the eagle-headed god (also known as the god of the sky or the patron saint of the pharaohs), also known as the eye of Ugat, which has a sacred meaning and represents the protection of the gods and the supremacy of the king. The ancient Egyptians also believed that the Eye of Horus could function in their resurrection and rebirth.
This mysterious symbol, which resembles both "R" and "X," often appears on doctors' prescription lists or even on a small pill bottle. Where did it come from? Speaking of this, we have to go back to ancient Egypt five thousand years ago.
This symbol is the Eye of Horus, a simplified form of the eye of the ancient Egyptian physician god Horus.
The image below shows the contents of the circle of the king of Horus.
2. Bian Magpie
Bian Que was a doctor during the Yellow Emperor's period, and in Liangcheng Mountain, Weishan County, Shandong Province, and Songshan Mountain in Jiaxiang County, there were eight Han painting elephant stones of "Bian Que Acupuncture Diagram". The stone is carved with a bird's human face, and the bian que is holding a needle to acupuncture the patient. This should be the Bian Que of the Yellow Emperor period in myths and legends.
3. Similarity comparison
(1) Horus and Bian Que have the same profession, one is a healer, the other is a divine doctor, Horus's eyes are still on the prescription sign to pay attention to the behavior of future generations of doctors. The name bian que is still popular among the people.
(2)
The name is similar, and judging from the circle of Horus's king name, it is almost the name of Bian Que. Read from right to left, the words on the left are the same as the flat characters of the small seal. The bird on the right is the image of the bird, which is probably the original way of writing the bird in the bird's book, so it seems that Horus's name is actually Bian Que.
(3) The image is similar, Horus is the image of the bird, and the flat magpie is also the image of the bird.
To sum up, Horus in ancient Egypt is likely to be the Chinese legendary divine doctor Bian Que, of course, this Bian Que is not a Qin Yue person in the Spring and Autumn And Warring States period.