
Heqet.
Heqet, also known as Heqtit, was an Egyptian goddess of agriculture and fertility. She was sometimes seen as a consort of Khnum or even his female counterpart, with whom she was known to create the bodies and souls of children. To the Egyptians, the frog was an ancient symbol of fertility, related to the annual flooding of the Nile.
Heqet was considered the wife of Khnum, who formed the bodies of new children on his potter's wheel.
In the Osiris myth, it was Heqet who breathed life into the new body of Horus at birth, as she was a goddess of the last moments of birth. As the birth of Horus became more intimately associated with the resurrection of Osiris, so Heqet's role became one more closely associated with resurrection. Eventually, this association led to her amulets gaining the phrase I am the resurrection in the Christian era along with cross and lamb symbolism.