Introduction
Alexandria is the second-largest city in the wonderful and ancient country of Egypt. It was founded around a small town back in 332 BC by none other than Alexander the Great, one of the greatest conquistadors, the king of Macedonia, and the leader of the Greek League of Corinth. Alexander transformed once a small town into a buzzing city, the center of Hellenistic civilization in this part of the world. Alexandria also became a Ptolemaic Egypt capital, as well as the capital of Roman and Byzantine Egypt, and remained that until the Muslim conquest of AD 641.
Alexandria Dog Names in Pop Culture
Is there a higher honor than being a god in world-famous mythology? And is there a better way to be a god than to walk around in dog form? We think not, and that is why our star of the day is an ancient Egyptian god Anubis.
Anubis is a god associated with the afterlife and the mummification in the religion of ancient Egypt, and one of the most important deities of the time. He was usually depicted in his canine form, but sometimes even in his human form with a canine head. The archeologists have successfully identified the sacred animal of Anubis as the African golden wolf, or Egyptian canid.
Throughout the years, people have assumed various roles for Anubis. He was the protector of the graves, the embalmer, lord of the underworld before Osiris took his title, and most importantly he was the one who led souls into the afterlife. Anubis invented the weighing scale for the Weighing of the Heart, in which the scale would show whether the soul would be allowed to step into the realm of the dead. Anubis’ role was to be the guardian of the weighing scales, and a scene of him doing his job is depicted in the Book of the Dead, where Anubis can be seen measuring the soul and deciding if it will indeed go forward to the land of the dead, the Underworld known as Duat. But how did he do it? On one pan, Anubis would put an ostrich feather which represented Ma’at, or the truth, and on the other one, the heart of the deceased person. If the heart turned out to be heavier than the feather, Ammit, a powerful funeral deity would devour the soul, but if it turned out to be lighter than Ma’at, the soul would ascend to heaven and be in peace.
As the protector of graves and cemeteries, Anubis protected the dead from evil. In the Jumilhac papyrus, Anubis protected Osiris’ body from Set by turning into a leopard. He managed to beat him and protect Osiris, which is why the Egyptian priests who performed the funeral rituals often wore leopard skins in honor of Anubus’ victory. Anubis also helped Isis embalm Osiris’ body when he died, and that is why embalmers and priests often wear a wolf mask to commemorate Anubis’ efforts. Finally, in the late pharaonic era, Anubis had the role of the guide of the souls. This means that he led the souls into the afterlife, taking them to Osiris who had overtaken his role as the lord of the Underworld.
Alexandria Dog Name Considerations
Picking a perfect name for your new doggo can be hard, but luckily, there are so many places from where you can draw your inspiration, and one of them is the city of Alexandria. Egyptian culture, in general, is quite fascinating, so when we take that into account, you can end up with more names than you can handle. However, there are a few places you can start, such as the names of ancient Egyptian gods! First off, since we are talking about gods, you can take the name of the god of embalming, Anubis, as he was often depicted as a black dog or a man with a canine head. Next, you can pick the name of the primordial god Nun, or Naunet in its feminine form. Amun or Amun Ra is a perfect name for a dog that is your ray of sunshine, mostly because Amun was the god of Sun and Wind.
If you like cows and you want to honor them in some way, even through the name of your pup, you can name them Hathor, after the goddess of joy, love, and motherhood, often depicted as a cow. Of course, since we all know that dogs are the most honorable creatures in the world, you can name your little furry goddess Maat, after the goddess of truth, justice, and cosmic order.
Male Alexandria Dog Names
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Anubis
After Anubis, the god of the afterlife, embalmment, and the guide of the souls
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Geb
After Geb, the god of the Earth, husband of the goddess Nut
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Amun Ra
After Amun Ra, the god of Sun and Wind
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Ptah
After Ptah, the creator god, one who formed the triad of Memphis
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Osiris
After Osiris, the god of death, King of the Underworld
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Set
After Set, brother of Osiris, god of chaos, storms, disorder, violence, and desert
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Horus
After Horus, the falcon god of the sky, divine protector of the pharaohs
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Thoth
After Thoth, god of magic, wisdom, writing, and the moon
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Aten
After Aten, a god in whose name the first monotheistic religion was formed
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Khepri
After Khepri, a god with a beetle head, personification of the morning sun
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Hapy
After Hapy, the god of inundation, one who brought the flood each year
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Bes
After Bes, protector of households, mothers, children, and childbirth
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Khnum
After Khnum, a creator god who molded people on a potter’s wheel
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Ra-Horakhty
After Ra-Horakhty, combination of Ra and Horus, god of the rising sun
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Shu
After Shu, the god of air who held up Nut and separated Earth and the Sky
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Sobek
After Sobek, the god of Nile, depicted as a man with the head of a crocodile
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Callimachus
After Callimachus, a scholar, poet, and critic at the Library of Alexandria
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Zenodotus
After Zenodotus of Ephesus, a Greek grammarian, literary critic, and the first librarian of the Library of Alexandria
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Aaron
After Aaron of Alexandria, a 7th century physician who wrote over 30 books on medicine
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Jean
After Jean Egelou, a French photographer born in Alexandria
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Dodi
After Dodi Fayed, former boyfriend of Princess Diana
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Nicola
After Nicola Filacuridi, an Egyptian tenor born in Alexandria
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Knut
After Knut Mørch Hansson, a Norwegian actor born in Alexandria
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Kris
After Kris Hemensley, an English-Australian poet raised in Alexandria
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Naguib
After Naguib Kanawati, an Australian Egyptian Egyptologist born in Alexandria
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Apollonius
After Apollonius of Rhodes, an ancient Greek author and a librarian at the Library of Alexandria
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Eratosthenes
After Eratosthenes of Cyrene, a Greek mathematician and the chief librarian of the Library of Alexandria
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Istros
After Istros the Callimachean, a Greek writer and a librarian at the Library of Alexandria
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Aristarchus
After Aristarchus of Samothrace, a grammarian and the librarian at the Library of Alexandria
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Aristophanes
After Aristophanes of Byzantium, a Greek scholar and the head librarian of the Library of Alexandria
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Female Alexandria Dog Names
Votes | Name | Vote |
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Hathor
After Hathor, the goddess of motherhood, joy, and love
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Bastet
After Bastet, the goddess of home, women, and secrets
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Maat
After Maat, the goddess of truth, cosmic order, and justice
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Isis
After Isis, the most famous Egyptian goddess of magic, mother of gods
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Taweret
After Taweret, the goddess of childbirth, often depicted as a hippopotamus
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Nun
After Nun, the oldest god, father of Ra, the sun goddess
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Nephthys
After Nephthys, the protector goddess of the dead, sister of Isis and Osiris, wife of Set and mother of Anubis
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Nut
After Nut, a sky goddess whose body was covering the Earth, mother of Osiris, Isis, Nepthys, and Set
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Sekhmet
After Sekhmet, the goddess of war whose name means “the powerful one”
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Seshat
After Seshat, the goddess of measurement and writing
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Tefnut
After Tefnut, the goddess of moisture, mother of Nut and Geb
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Alexandria
After Alexandria, the ancient Egyptian city turned into one of the most important historical places
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Catherine
After Catherine of Alexandria, a Christian saint and virgin, daughter of Constus of Alexandria
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Dorothea
After Dorothea of Alexandria, a Christian virgin martyr
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Theodora
After Theodora of Alexandria, a saint and Desert Mother
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Aziza
After Aziza Abdel-Halim, an academic, teacher, founder of the Muslim Women’s National Network Australia, raised in Alexandria
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Nadia
After Nadia Ahmed Abdou, the governor of Bahreira Governorate in Egypt, born in Alexandria
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Aedesia
After Aedesia, a philosopher of the Neoplatonic school who lived in Alexandria
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Gaby
After Gaby Aghion, a French fashion designer and founder of Chloe, born in Alexandria
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Mariam
After Mariam A. Aleem, an Egyptian artist and art professor educated in Alexandria
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Celine
After Celine Axelos, an Egyptian poet, speaker, and woman of letters, born and lived in Alexandria
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Mona
After Mona A. El-Bayoumi, an Egyptian-American painter and artist born in Alexandria
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Eileen
After Eileen Caddy, a new age author born in Alexandria
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Antigone
After Antigone Constanda, an Egyptian designer and model born in Alexandria
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Penelope
After Penelope Delta, a Greek author of children’s books, born in Alexandria
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Ferial
After Princess Ferial Farouk of Egypt, the eldest daughter of King Farouk of Egypt
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Farida
After Queen Farida, the queen of Egypt for eleven years
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Naglaa
After Naglaa Fathi, an Egyptian actress, discovered in Alexandria
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Ola
After Ola Ghanem, an Egyptian actress born in Alexandria
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Nelly
After Nelly Karim, an Egyptian Russian actress, model, and ballerina, born in Alexandria
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