Maahes (either full or half depending on the mother)
Nefertem (/ˈnɛfərˌtɛm/; possibly "beautiful one who closes" or "one who does not close"; also spelledNefertum orNefer-temu) was, inEgyptian mythology, originally a lotus flower at the creation of the world, who had arisen from the primal waters.[2] Nefertem represented both the first sunlight and the delightful smell of the Egyptian blue lotus flower, having arisen from the primal waters within an Egyptian blue water-lily,Nymphaea caerulea. Some of the titles of Nefertem were "He Who is Beautiful" and "Water-Lily of the Sun", and a version of theBook of the Dead says:
Rise like Nefertem from the blue water lily, to the nostrils of Ra (the creator and sungod), and come forth upon the horizon each day.
Nefertem or Nefertum was depicted either as a lion-headed man (left), as a beautiful young man (right)
Nefertem was eventually seen as the son of the creator godPtah, and the goddessesSekhmet andBast were sometimes called his mother. Inart, Nefertem is usually depicted as a beautiful young man having blue water-lily flowers around his head. As the son of Bastet, he also sometimes has the head of alion or is a lion or cat reclining. The ancient Egyptians[specify] often carried small statuettes of him as good-luck charms.
One of the most notable depictions of Nefertem is theHead of Nefertem, a wooden bust depicting a young kingTutankhamun as Nefertem with his head emerging from a lotus flower.
Morenz, Siegfried; Schubert, Johannes (1954).Der Gott auf der Blume: Eine ägyptische Kosmogonie und ihre weltweite Bildwirkung (in German). Verlag Artibus Asiæ.