Sphinx (Marvel Comics)
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| Sphinx | |
|---|---|
The Sphinx (right) battles the Thing on the cover of The Thing #34 (April 1986), art by Kim DeMulder. | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | (Anath-Na): Nova #6 (Feb. 1977) (Karim): The New Warriors #4 (Aug. 1990) |
| Created by | (Anath-Na): Marv Wolfman and Sal Buscema (Karim): Fabian Nicieza |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Anath-Na Mut Meryet Karim |
| Species | Human Mutant |
| Notable aliases | (Anath-Na): The Dreaded One Omni-Sphinx (Karim): Lady Sphinx |
| Abilities | (Anath-Na):
(Karim):
|
The Sphinx is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Publication history
[edit]The male version of Sphinx first appeared in Nova #6 (Feb. 1977) and was created by Marv Wolfman and Sal Buscema.[1]
The female version of Sphinx first appeared in The New Warriors #4 (Aug. 1990) and was created by Fabian Nicieza.
Fictional character biography
[edit]Anath-Na Mut
[edit]Anath-Na Mut is a chief wizard in the court of Ramesses II in ancient Egypt. Defeated in a magic duel by the prophet Moses, Anath-Na was exiled into the desert for his failure.[2] The title Nova recounts in a flashback of how Anath-Na discovered the mystic Ka Stone, which grants him immortality and superhuman powers. Under the alias Sphinx, Anath-Na wanders Earth for a thousand years, but becomes bored of his immortal life.[3] After learning about the origins of Richard Rider, aliens from planet Xandar, and their sentient machine, Sphinx theorizes that he can use Xandar's Living Computer to finally die.[4]
In a Fantastic Four Annual, Sphinx empowers a pawn known as Thraxon to help subdue the Inhumans. He utilizes ruler Black Bolt's electron energy to amplify a scanning device and read all the minds in everyone for knowledge of how Sphinx could finally die. The Fantastic Four defeat Thraxon and in a final confrontation, Black Bolt blasts him into deep space.[2] Sphinx reappears in the Nova series, taking mental control of Nova, along with his temporary allies (Comet, Crimebuster, Diamondhead, Powerhouse, and Doctor Sun), they travel back to Xandar and join a war against the invading Skrulls.[5]
Once on Xandar, Sphinx takes advantage of the war to absorb knowledge from its planet-size computer. Evolving into a god, Sphinx decides to destroy Earth. Knowing that he is outmatched, Mister Fantastic contacts the cosmic entity Galactus and presents a proposal — if he stops Sphinx, then Mister Fantastic will release him from his vow to never devour Earth. He accepts and, when the group finds Galactus a new herald (Terrax), they travel to Earth again. After Galactus defeats Sphinx, he crushes the Ka Stone and sends Anath-Na back in time to ancient Egypt. Anath-Na is trapped in a time loop, forcing him to constantly relive his life up to this point.[6]
Anath-Na relives his life several times due to a chronal flaw, until he meets his past self. The two build a machine to reconstruct the Ka Stone. After hypnotizing his past self so that he will not remember their meeting, Anath-Na enters suspended animation. He awakens after Galactus departs and begins to rebuild the Ka Stone.[7] The Thing battles Sphinx into a standstill, destroys his machine, and leaves him with an incomplete Ka Stone.[8] The Puppet Master forces Sphinx to crush the Ka Stone; as a result Anath-Na immediately ages 5,000 years before turning into dust.[9]
Meryet Karim
[edit]Meryet Karim is a desert nomad who finds an unconscious Anath-Na Mut soon after he finds the Ka Stone. While nursing him back to health, Karim absorbs residual energies from the Ka Stone, which grants her a fraction of its powers and allows her to continuously reincarnate while retaining the knowledge of her previous lives. In the modern era, she finds the Ka Scepter's remnants and reconstructs it to become the new Sphinx. Then, Karim alters history so Anath-Na will kill Moses and conquer Earth. Sphinx is thwarted by the New Warriors and resurrects Anath-Na in a bid to reclaim his love. The empowered Sphinx battles the New Warriors, but when facing his feelings for Karim, he merges with her into one composite entity who goes back in time to live a normal life.[10]
Powers, abilities, and equipment
[edit]The Anath-Na incarnation of Sphinx is an ancient mutant who gained additional powers through use of the Ka Stone and possibly other sources. He has supernatural strength, stamina, and durability, as well as virtual immortality. Courtesy of the jewel's mystical properties, Anath-Na also has a range of metaphysical abilities, including energy control, mind reading, hypersonic flight, and knowledge absorption. The Meryet Karim incarnation of Sphinx possesses nigh-omnipotence after imbuing herself with energies from the Ka Scepter. Both versions of Sphinx have expertise in Egyptian magic.[11]
In other media
[edit]The Meryet Karim incarnation of Sphinx appears in Lego Marvel Avengers: Strange Tails, voiced by Alia Shawkat.[12] This version is a social media influencer who, reluctantly, uses cats as her gimmick. She gets her powers from an idol of the previous holder Anath-Na Mut, voiced by Kerem Erdinc.
References
[edit]- ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ a b Fantastic_Four_Annual #12 (November 1977)
- ^ Nova #6-7 (February-March 1977)
- ^ Nova #11 (July 1977)
- ^ Nova #23-25 (January-May 1979)
- ^ Fantastic Four #206-213 (May-December 1979)
- ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. p. 324-325. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
- ^ Marvel_Two-in-One #91 (September 1982)
- ^ The Thing #34 (April 1986)
- ^ The_New_Warriors #47-50 (May–July 1994)
- ^ Official_Handbook_of_the_Marvel_Universe_A-Z #11 (December 2009)
- ^ "Meryet Voice - LEGO Marvel Avengers: Strange Tails". Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved December 3, 2025.
- Characters created by Marv Wolfman
- Characters created by Sal Buscema
- Comics characters introduced in 1977
- Fictional ancient Egyptian people
- Fictional characters with energy-manipulation abilities
- Fictional telepaths
- Marvel Comics characters who use magic
- Marvel Comics characters with superhuman durability or invulnerability
- Marvel Comics characters with superhuman strength
- Marvel Comics immortals
- Marvel Comics mutants
- Marvel Comics supervillains