In ancient Egyptian religion , a crocodile god.
His chief sanctuary in Fayy 016B; m province included a sacred crocodile, which was believed to be an incarnation of the god. Sebek may have been associated with fertility or death and burial before becoming a major deity and patron of kings in the Middle Kingdom ( 0441; 1938 0441; 1600? BC). He was merged with Re , the sun god, to constitute a crocodile form of that deity known as Sebek-Re. The worship of Sebek continued in Ptolemaic and Roman times.
Sebek, wearing horns, solar disk with uraeus, and plumes, bronze figurine, c. 600300 BC; ...
By courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum