Osiris is a central deity in ancient Egyptian spirituality, associated with the afterlife, resurrection, fertility, and the cycle of nature. He is traditionally depicted as a mummified man with green or black skin—symbolizing rebirth and the fertile Nile soil—and wears the white crown of Upper Egypt flanked by two ostrich feathers, holding the crook and flail.
Osiris is the son of Geb (earth) and Nut (sky), and the brother-husband of Isis. He is also the brother of Set, who murdered him out of jealousy. After Osiris’s death, Isis reassembled his body and resurrected him briefly through magical rites to conceive their son, Horus.
Spiritually, Osiris represents divine order, the promise of eternal life, and the soul’s transformation after death. In esoteric systems, he symbolizes the initiate’s journey through death and rebirth—the evolution of consciousness from mortal limitation to spiritual awakening. In Egyptian mysticism, Osiris is often seen as the ruler and judge of the underworld (Duat), guiding souls through their passage beyond the physical realm. His myth encodes themes of dismemberment and wholeness, often mirrored in archetypal death-and-rebirth initiations across esoteric traditions.