Muthis may have been an ephemeral ancient Egyptian pharaoh of the Twenty-ninth dynasty.
He is sometime reported as a son of Nepherites I who ruled for a brief time before being deposed by an usurper, Psammuthes. However, this statement is based on an interpretation of a passage in the Demotic chronicle:
Nevertheless, the Demotic chronicle never mention the name of Muthis and, as pointed out by the Egyptologist John D. Ray, "his son" could be a reference to Hakor instead.
It is also possible that Muthis was a very shadowly usurper, maybe related to the other usurper Psammuthes. Another option is that "Muthis" was simply a copying error, and therefore never existed; the latter hypotesis is supported by the fact that the name is clearly hellenized but there are no clues of what could have originally meant "Muthis" in Egyptian.
His name does not appear on any monument, and he is only mentioned by Eusebius's Epithome of Manetho. Eusebius gave him a single year of reign and placed him at the very end of the dynasty, after Nepherites II; however, the armenian version of Eusebius placed him between Psammuthes and Nepherites II.
A man with a battle within his sould rides in a carriage
pulled by two horses, that both pull to opposite
directions. The other is incontrollable. They are the
Spirit and the Soul... Chorus: The driver struggling
forever in reins. Embodiment of sense. Right to a soul
hard to reach. Possible, if just a man can persuade the
Lion in Himself to help, to keep the Dragon in control.
The spiral`s continous twists and turns have a mystic
meaning attached to the Fate of Soul. Keep the Lion and
the Dragon...