PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

𓊨𓏏𓆇 Ꜣst

Magic, Motherhood, Throne · Throne (Egyptian ꜣst)

Tier 2 Ꜣst.com
Ꜣst — Magic, Motherhood, Throne
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

𓊨𓏏𓆇

The name in its original Egyptian form. Ꜣst (𓊨𓏏𓆇) is attested in the source tradition — “Throne (Egyptian ꜣst)”. Its original diacritics and script distinctions carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

isis

Reduced to plain isis, the name loses everything that made it specific: original diacritics and script distinctions. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Ꜣst

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Ꜣst restores original diacritics and script distinctions, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Ꜣst.com → xn--st-rq8h.com

The non-ASCII characters in Ꜣst are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Ꜣst.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Ꜣst travels from ancient script to the modern URL

𓊨𓏏𓆇
Hieroglyphs
Ꜣst
Reading: Original vocalisation unknown; Egyptological /ˈiː.sɪs/.
Reconstruction: Egyptian Ꜣst; vowels supplied by convention.
Egyptian hieroglyphic · right-to-left / top-to-bottom · Old Kingdom – Late Antiquity, c. 2600 BCE – 400 CE · Egypt
𓊨
Ꜣst
Ꜣst
phonogram / ideogram
Hieroglyphic sign; Egyptological reading Ꜣst. Vowels are supplied by convention.
𓏏
hieroglyph
phonogram / ideogram
Hieroglyphic sign; Egyptological reading uncertain. Vowels are supplied by convention.
𓆇
hieroglyph
phonogram / ideogram
Hieroglyphic sign; Egyptological reading uncertain. Vowels are supplied by convention.
Original Script
𓊨𓏏𓆇
Indigenous writing
Transliteration
Ꜣst
Scholarly reading
Unicode Restoration
Ꜣst
Registrable form
Punycode
xn--st-oq8h.com
DNS encoding
ASCII Fallback
isis
Flattened spelling

Etymology

Egyptian Ꜣst; the original vocalisation is unknown. The name may be connected with ꜣs.t “throne", reflecting her role as the throne of kingship.

Meaning

Magic, Motherhood, Throne

From original to transliteration

  1. The Egyptian name is written 𓊨𓏏𓆇 in hieroglyphs.
  2. Hieroglyphs combine logograms, phonograms, and determinatives; the exact function of each sign depends on context.
  3. Egyptian writing does not record vowels; the vocalised form is a modern convention reconstructed from Coptic and Greek evidence.
  4. The Unicode restoration Ꜣst uses Egyptological alef/ayin and other registrable characters; the hieroglyphic form is not registrable in .com.
  • 𓊨𓏏𓆇 Original script
  • Ꜣst Unicode restoration
  • isis ASCII fallback
  • Ísis alt-stress
  • Pyramid Texts
    c. 2400–2300 BCE Saqqara Pyramid Texts of Unas, Spell 245
  • Coffin Texts
    c. 2055–1650 BCE Egypt Coffin Texts, Spell 30 (and parallels)
  • Book of the Dead
    c. 1550–50 BCE Egypt Book of the Dead, Papyrus of Ani, chapter 17
Allen, Middle EgyptianTier 1
Faulkner, A Concise Dictionary of Middle EgyptianTier 1
Hannig, Ägyptisches WörterbuchTier 2
Wörterbuch der ägyptischen Sprache (Wb)Tier 1

DNS / IDN note

The Unicode restoration Ꜣst uses Egyptological characters registrable in .com; hieroglyphs are outside the .com IDN table.

  • !The original vocalisation of Egyptian words is not recorded and is reconstructed by convention.
  • !The function of individual hieroglyphs (logogram vs. phonogram vs. determinative) is context-dependent.
  • !Egyptian hieroglyphs do not record vowels; the original vocalisation is unknown.
  • !Modern Egyptological pronunciation supplies vowels by convention and may differ significantly from ancient speech.
03

Pronunciation

How Ꜣst was spoken

/ˈʔaːsət/ Egyptological Reconstruction
Ꜣ- Glottal stop [ʔ], the Egyptological alef (U+A723); at the beginning of the name it functions as a consonantal onset before the vowel.
-aː- Long open vowel in the first syllable; hieroglyphic ꜣst records no vowels, so the quality depends on Coptic and Greek evidence.
-s Voiceless alveolar fricative [s], as in English 'see'.
-t Voiceless alveolar stop [t]; the final -t is the feminine suffix, often unpronounced in later Egyptian and absent in Coptic.
04

The Throne Made Flesh

Magic, Motherhood, and Kingship

Ꜣst is the throne that walks. Her very name is written with the hieroglyph of a seat (O29), and the king sits on her lap as on the throne of Egypt itself. She is the sister-wife of Osiris, the mother of Horus, and the most formidable magician in the Egyptian cosmos — a goddess who knows the secret names of things and is not afraid to use them.

Where other gods rule by force or decree, Ꜣst rules by devotion, cunning, and love. She reassembles the murdered Osiris, hides her infant son from Set, and outwits the sun-god Re himself to extract his hidden name. Her story is the Egyptian closest approach to a gospel: a god who dies, a mother who saves, a child who inherits.

The Throne

Her name and form are bound to the royal seat; every pharaoh is enthroned on Isis.

Words of Power

She commands heka, the force that animates ritual speech, and knows names that even Re keeps secret.

Mother of Horus

She conceives Horus after Osiris's death and nurses him in the papyrus thickets of Chemmis.

The Protectress

With outspread wings she shelters the living, the dead, and especially children and kings.

Sacred Symbols

Throne hieroglyph Her name and body; the seat on which the king is established
Outspread wings Protection of the living and the dead; the winged goddess sheltering Osiris or the king
Ankh The life she grants to Horus, the king, and the justified dead
Sistrum Musical power used to frighten enemies and celebrate the goddess
Tyet knot The 'blood of Isis,' a protective amulet associated with her menstrual and life-giving power
05

Mythology

Stories of Ꜣst

Isis's mythology is the central drama of the Osirian cycle: love, murder, fragmentation, and restoration. It is also a handbook of magical power, because Isis does not accept loss as final.

Myth of Osiris

The Lament and the Search

When Set dismembers Osiris and scatters his body across Egypt, Ꜣst wanders the land in mourning, gathering the pieces with her sister Nephthys. She reassembles them, anoints the body, and, by her magic, conceives Horus. The Pyramid Texts and later Plutarch's On Isis and Osiris preserve different versions of the story, but the core is constant: Isis makes wholeness out of what was torn apart.

Birth of Horus

Chemmis

Pregnant and hunted, Isis hides in the marshes of Chemmis (Khemmis) to give birth to Horus. She protects him from scorpions, snakes, and the agents of Set, nursing him until he is old enough to claim his father's throne. The 'Isis lactans' image — Isis suckling Horus — became one of the most potent icons of divine motherhood in the ancient world.

Magic of Re

The Secret Name

In a New Kingdom narrative, Isis plots to learn the hidden name of Re, source of his power. She fashions a serpent from his spittle and earth, and its bite brings the sun-god to agony. Only when he reveals his true name does she provide the cure. The tale is a theological statement: even the supreme god is vulnerable to the one who knows the true word.

The Seven Scorpions

A Mother's Rage

While fleeing Set, Isis travels with seven scorpions. When a rich woman shuts her door, the scorpions sting the woman's child; Isis, moved by pity, heals the boy with her voice and magic, then turns the venom back on the scorpion goddess Serqet. The story binds maternal vengeance to maternal mercy.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Isis is the goddess who refuses to let death have the last word. She does not bargain with the underworld; she walks into it, collects the fragments, and reassembles the beloved. Her power is not the thunderbolt but the patient knot, the hidden name, the breast that keeps a threatened child alive.

Enter Extended Lore
Ꜣst mascot