Nun and Naunet
One of the oldest mythologies in the world is that of the Ogdoad of Hermopolis. The Ogdoad is an eight-part pantheon that consists of four male deities, often identified with frogs, and their four female counterparts, usually indicated by snakes. Nun and Naunet are one pair, and together they are associated with the waters of chaos and creation. Naunet is also described as the goddess of the sky above the primordial ocean. Another pair is Huh, the god of the endless sky whose name is used to represent infinity, and Hauhet, worshiped as a goddess of sky and space. Kuk and Kauket represent the primordial darkness and are identified with the dawn and darkness giving way to light. The last pair of the Ogdoad is Amun and Amuhet. Amun is the supreme god and is either depicted as a man or as an elemental force of divine power. He and Amuhet are deities who rule over the sky and wind. Amuhet also welcomes the dead into Naunet, where people go after they die.
In Hermopolis, a city whose name means “the city of Hermes,” their creation myth is the oldest, and therefore truest, version in Egypt. Their mythology shows Nun as a part of the Ogdoad as well as the waters of chaos, again both within and outside of the creation of the universe.