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The Book of the Dead is the common name for ancient Egyptian
funerary texts known as The Book of Coming [or Going] Forth
By Day. The name "Book of the Dead" was the invention
of the German Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius, who published
a selection of some texts in 1842.
The "book" was nothing like a modern book
the text was initially carved on the exterior of the deceased
person's sarcophagus, but was later written on papyrus now
known as scrolls and buried inside the sarcophagus with the
deceased, presumably so that it would be both portable and
close at hand. Other texts often accompanied the primary texts
including the hypocephalus (meaning 'under the head') which
was a primer version of the full text.
The Book of the Dead constituted as a collection of spells,
charms, passwords, numbers and magical formulas for the use
of the deceased in the afterlife. This described many of the
basic tenets of Egyptian
mythology. They were intended to guide the dead through
the various trials that they would encounter before reaching
the underworld. Knowledge of the appropriate spells was considered
essential to achieving happiness after death. Spells or enchantments
vary in distinctive ways between the texts of differing "mummies"
or sarcophagi, depending on the prominence and other class
factors of the deceased.
The Book of the Dead was usually illustrated with pictures
showing the tests to which the deceased would be subjected.
The most important was the weighing of the heart of the dead
person against Ma'at, or Truth (carried out by Anubis). The
god Thoth would record the results and the monster Ammit would
wait nearby to eat the heart should it prove unworthy.
The earliest known versions date from the 16th century BC
during the 18th Dynasty (ca. 1580 BC1350 BC). It partly
incorporated two previous collections of Egyptian religious
literature, known as the Coffin Texts (ca. 2000 BC) and the
Pyramid Texts (ca. 2600 BC-2300 BC), both of which were eventually
superseded by the Book of the Dead.
The text was often individualized for the deceased person
- so no two copies contain the same text - however, "book"
versions are generally categorized into four main divisions
the Heliopolitan version, which was edited by the priests
of the college of Annu (used from the 5th to the 11th dynasty
and on walls of tombs until about 200); the Theban version,
which contained hieroglyphics only (20th to the 28th dynasty);
a hieroglyphic and hieratic character version, closely related
to the Theban version, which had no fixed order of chapters
(used mainly in the 20th dynasty); and the Saite version which
has strict order (used after the 26th dynasty).
Egyptian
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