The Weighing of the Heart Ceremony
The ancient Egyptians believed that, when they died, they would
be judged on their behaviour during their lifetime before they could
be granted a place in the Afterlife. This judgement ceremony was
called "Weighing of the Heart" and was recorded
in Chapter 125 of the funerar text known as the "Book
of the Dead".
The ceremony was believed to have taken place before Osiris,
the chief god of the dead and Afterlife, and a tribunal of 43 dieties.
Standing before the tribunal the deceased was asked to name each
of the divine judges and swear that he or she had not committed
any offences, ranging from raising the voice to stealing. This was
the "negative confession". If found innocent, the deceased
was declared "true of voice" and allowed to proceed into
the Afterlife.
The proceedings were recorded by Thoth,
the scribe of the gods, and the deity
of wisdom. Thoth
was often dipicted as a human with an ibis head, writing on a scroll
of papyrus. His other animal form, the baboon, was often depicted
sitting on the pivot of the scales of justice.
The symbolic ritual that accompanied this ritual was the weighing
of the heart of the deceased on a pair of enormous scales. It was
weighed against the principle of truth and justice ( known as maat
) represented by a feather, the symbol of the goddess
of truth, order and justice, Maat. If the heart balanced against
the feather then the deceased would be granted a place in the Fields
of Hetep and Iaru. If it was heavy with the weight of wrongdoings,
the balance would sink and the heart would be grabbed and devoured
by a terrifying beast that sat ready and waiting by the scales.
This beast was Ammit,
"the gobbler",
a composite animal with the head of a crocodile, the front legs
and body of lion or leopard, and the back legs of a hippopotamus.
The ancient Egyptians considered the heart to be the centre of
thought, memory and emotion. It was thus associated with interlect
and personality and was considered the most important organ in the
body. It was deemed to be essential for rebirth into the Afterlife.
Unlike the other internal organs, it was never removed and embalmed
separately, because its presence in the body was crucial.
If the deceased was found to have done wrong and the heart weighed
down the scales, he or she was not though to enter a place of tourment
like hell, but to cease to exist at all. This idea would have terrified
the ancient Egyptians. However, for those who could afford to include
Chapter 125 of the Book
of the Dead in their tombs, it was almost guaranteed that they
would pass successfully into the Afterlife. This is because the
Egyptians believed in the magical qualities of the actual writings
and illustrations in funerary texts. By depicting the heart balancing
in the scales against the
feather of Maat they ensured that would be the favourable outcome.
The entire ceremony was, after all, symbolic.
Following the Weighing of the Heart, the organ was returned to
its owner. To make quite sure that this did happen, Chapters 26-29
of the Book
of the Dead were spells to ensure that the heart was returned
and this it could never be removed again.
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