A limestone statue of the Nitra (graced or cared for Tawi) - From Madame, Ptolemaic period, displayed at the Louvre Museum
It was called the Lady of Heaven, which is the feminine version of the Lord of the Sun (Ra).
Her name is the feminine form of the name Ra, while the longest name is “Ra’at Tawi,” meaning (the goddess of the two lands), meaning Upper and Lower Egypt.
Interaet “Raaat” appears for the first time during the era of the Fifth Dynasty. It is likely that “Rayaat” was accompanying “Ra” since its beginning and had no separate origin from it, and although it was called the Lady of Heaven and the Lord of the Two Lands, it did not reach the importance of Hathor Who was also considered a wife of the god Ra (or in other accounts his daughter)
Nitra was also considered "shepherded" also as the wife of Winter "Minto", the Lord of War, and formed a trinity with him along with their son Harb
Her feast day was in the fourth month of the harvest (Shumo-Summer) and her worship centers were in Madamud, Todd, and Taiba ... and I found hymns for her on fragments written in demotic from the Roman period.