Serapis (Greek: Σέραπις, romanized: Sērapis; Latin: Serapis; Egyptian: Wsir-Hp or Osor-Hapi, meaning "Osiris-Apis") was a Graeco-Egyptian god who served as the deified, Hellenized version of the Egyptian god Osiris in the Ptolemaic Kingdom. Serapis was introduced in the third century BC during the reign of Ptolemy I Soter, possibly as a syncretic or "combined" god who encompassed attributes of the Egyptian gods Osiris and Apis, as well as those of the Greek gods Hades, Dionysus, Asklepios, and Zeus. The cult of Serapis and his consort Isis spread throughout the Hellenistic world, eventually reaching Rome, and the god became one of the most widely worshipped deities in the ancient Mediterranean world. The worship of Serapis declined in the 4th century AD as Christianity rose to prominence, and the last temple of Serapis was closed in 535 AD by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I.
This site lets you convert words, names, and phrases into numerical values using different gematria systems. You can use the main calculator gematria tool at the top of the page: type your text, choose a method, and press Convert.
The calculator gematria tool supports multiple alphabets and standard letter–number mappings. More systems will be added in the future.
The reverse gematria calculator uses the same alphabet as the standard system but assigns values in reverse order (for example, A = 26, B = 25, …, Z = 1 in a basic English reverse setup). This lets you compare standard and reverse values for the same text.
Enter the word Serapis and press enter or button Convert. This will provide all selected gematria values for Serapis.
The site is designed to be compatible with common online tools and calculators, including the shematria gematria calculator and other popular gematria tools.