List of Book of the Dead spells

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This is a list of all the 189 known spells in the Book of the Dead , and what they are for.

Contents

1 - 20

1. For the day of burial. Often accompanied with a lavish vignette showing a funerary procession. [1] A spell for going out into the day. [2]
1B. Recitation for the day of burial. [3] Spell for permitting the noble dead to descend to the Netherworld on the day of the interment. [4]
2. A spell for going out into the day and living after death. [5]
3. Another like it. [5]
4. Spell for passing on the upper road of Rosetjau. [5] Rosetjau is the "name of the Necropolis of Giza or Memphis, later extended to the Other World in general." [6]
5. Spell for not doing work in the realm of the dead.
6. A shabti spell. First attested as Spell 472 of the Coffin Texts. The text of the spell reads-

Spell for causing a shabti to do work for a man in the realm of the dead: O shabti, allotted to me, if I be summoned or if I be detailed to do any work which has to be done in the realm of the dead, if indeed any obstacles are implanted for you therewith as a man at his duties, you shall detail yourself for me on every occasion of making arable the fields, of flooding the banks or of conveying sand from east to west; 'Here I am', you shall say.

Book of the Dead, spell 6. [7]
7. Protection from animals [8]
8. Spell for opening up the West by day. [5]
9. Identifies the owner with the god Horus, son of Osiris; and affirming that Osiris will triumph over his enemy Set, and asks for the gods to open a path for him. In the Papyrus of Ani this spell reads:

Words spoken by Ani: 'O you Soul [ba], greatly majestic, behold, I have come that I may see you; I open the Netherworld that I may see my father Osiris and drive away darkness, for I am beloved of him. I have come that I may see my father Osiris and that I may cut out the heart of Seth who has harmed my father Osiris. I have opened up every path which is in the sky and on earth, for I am the well-beloved son of my father Osiris. I am noble, I am a spirit [akh], I am equipped; O all you gods and all you spirits [akhu], prepare a path for me.

Book of the Dead, spell 9. [7]
10. Another spell for a man's going out into the day against his foes in the realm of the dead. [9]
11. Spell for going out against a foe in the realm of the dead. [9]
12. Spell for going in and out. [9]
13. Spell for going in and out of the West. [9]
14. Spell for removing anger from the heart of the god. [10]
15. A hymn to the sun-god. Not a standard text; any one of a number of hymns might be used. [11]
16. Not a text but a large vignette depicting the sunrise, referring to the daily rebirth of Ra [12]
17. A text about the nature of the creator-god Atum. This is one of the longest, most complex, and most frequently included spells; the text is often so obscure that it incorporates comments or glosses explaining the meaning of the words or offering alternatives. [13] The purpose of this spell was to ensure the owner could demonstrate his knowledge of religious secrets if challenged in the afterlife. [14] It is first known as Spell 335 of the Coffin Texts. [13] Part of the spell, as found in the Papyrus of Ani, reads:

All the evil which was on me has been removed.

What does that mean? It means that I was cleansed on the day of my birth in the two great and noble marshes which are in Heracleopolis on the day when the common folk make offerings to the Great God who is therein.

What are they? 'Eternity' is the name of one; 'sea' is the name of the other. They are the Lake of Natron and the Lake of Maat.

Otherwise said: 'Eternity governs' is the name of one; 'Sea' is the name of the other.

Otherwise said: 'Seed of Eternity' is the name of one; 'sea' is the name of the other. As for that Great God who is therein, he is Ra himself

Book of the Dead, spell 17. [15]
18. Often paired with Spell 17 [16]
19. Enables the dead to wear a 'wreath of vindication', a floral garland bestowed after the completion of the Weighing of the Heart. [17]
20. The deceased appeals to Thoth to vindicate him before the tribunals of the gods. [18]

21–30: Preservation of the parts of being

21. Concerned with the Opening of the Mouth ritual, which enabled the coffin to support life and take in nourishment. [3]
22. Concerned with the Opening of the Mouth ritual; opening the mouth to enable the deceased to speak out in the Weighing of the Heart judgement. [3] The words include:

My mouth has been given to me that I may speak with it in the presence of the Great God

Book of the Dead, spell 22 [11]
23. Concerned with the Opening of the Mouth ritual. The words include:

My mouth is opened, by mouth is split open by Shu with that iron harpoon of his with which he split open the mouths of the gods

Book of the Dead, spell 23 [3]
24. Secured some essential ability for the deceased.
25. Caused the deceased to remember his name after death. The name was regarded as a vital part of being. It begins:

I have put my name in the Upper Egyptian shrine, I [have] made my name to be remembered in the Lower Egyptian shrine, on this night of counting the years and of numbering the months...

Book of the Dead, spell 25 [19]
26. Helped to preserve the dead person's heart, and the heart's role in re-unifying the dead person's body and soul. It is sometimes illustrated with a vignette showing the god Anubis handing the deceased their own heart. [20]
27. Guarding against the theft or corruption of the deceased's heart by a group of gods, called 'those who steal hearts', and preventing the heart from betraying its owner at the Weighing of the Heart ritual [21]
28. Guarding against the loss of the heart. [22]
29. Guarding against the loss of the heart. [22]
29A. Guarding against the loss of the heart. [22]
29B. Guarding against the loss of the heart, by means of a heart amulet. This spell is found in manuscripts and also inscribed on heart-shaped amulets buried with the dead. Reads "I am the benu, the soul of Ra, who guides gods to the Netherworld when they go forth. The souls on earth will do what they desire, and the soul of [the deceased] will go forth at his desire". [23]
30. A heart spell.
30B. An appeal to the heart not to betray its owner in the Weighing of the Heart ritual (later described in Spell 125. Often inscribed on heart scarab amulets as well as on a manuscript. This spell also claims to have been found by a Prince Hordjedef of the 4th Dynasty; perhaps unlikely as the spell is first attested many years later, in the Second Intermediate Period. The spell includes this section about its own provenance

This spell was found in Hermopolis, under the feet of this god. It was written on a block of mineral of Upper Egypt in the writings of the god himself, and was discovered in the time of [King] Menkaure. It was the king's son Hordjedef who found it while he was going around making an inspection of the temples.

Book of the Dead, spell 30B [24]

The section imploring the heart reads:

O my heart of my mother! O my heart of my mother! O my heart of my different forms! Do not stand up as a witness against me, do not be opposed to me in the tribunal, do not be hostile to me in the presence of the Keeper of the Balance, for you are my ka which was in my body, the protector who made my members hale. Go forth to the happy place whereto we speed, do not make my name stink to the Entourage who make men. Do not tell lies about me in the presence of the god. It is indeed well that you should hear!

Book of the Dead, spell 30B [25]

31–53: Protection from peril

31. To stop the dead being harmed by crocodiles in the afterlife.

Get back! Retreat! Get back, you dangerous one! Do not come against me, do not live by my magic; may I not have to tell this name of yours to the Great God who sent you; 'Messenger' is the name of one, and Bedty is the name of the other. The crocodile speaks: 'Your face belongs to righteousness. The sky encloses the stars, magic encloses its settlements, and my mouth encloses the magic which is in it. My teeth are a knife, my tusks are the Viper Mountain. The deceased replied: 'O you with a spine who would work your mouth against this magic of mine, no crocodile which lives by magic shall take it away'

Book of the Dead, spell 31 [8]
32. The deceased takes on the identity of Ra and drives back eight crocodiles with a spear.

Get back you crocodile of the West, who lives on the Unwearying Stars!

Detestation of you is in my belly, for I have absorbed the power of Osiris, and I am Seth.

Get back, you crocodile of the West! The nau-snake is in my belly, and I have not given myself to you, your flame will not be on me.

Book of the Dead, spell 32 [26]
33. Protection against snakes: "O rerek-snake, take yourself off, for Geb protects me, get up, for you have eaten a mouse, which Ra detests, and you have chewed the bones of a putrid cat" [27] This is the first of five spells which protect the deceased from falling victim to snakes in the afterlife. [28]
34. Protection against snakebite. [28]
35. Protection against being eaten by snakes. [28]
36. Protection against the apshai-insect: "Begone from me, O Crooked-lips! I am Khnum, Lord of Shen, who despatches the words of the gods to Ra, and I report affairs to their master." [27]
37. Protection against 'songstress snakes'. [28]
38. Protection against hostile animals.
39. Protection against snakes. [28]
40. Protection against "him who swallowed a donkey", a snake who is shown eating a donkey. [28]
41. Prevents the deceased from being slaughtered by demonic servants of Osiris. [29]
42. Served the same purpose as 41, but also contains a list of all the essential parts of the body and their divine parallels.

My hair is Nu; my face is Ra; my eyes are Hathor; my ears are Wepwawet; my nose is She who presides over her lotus leaf; my lips are Anubis; my molars are Selkis; my incisors are Isis the goddess; my arms are the Ram, the Lord of mendes; my breast is Neith, Lady of Sais; my back is Seth; my phallus is Osiris; my muscles are the Lords of Kheraha; my chest is he who is greatly majestic; my belly and my spine are Sekhmet; my buttocks are the Eye of Horus; my thighs and my calves are Nut; my feet are Ptah; my toes are living falcons; there is no member of mine devoid of a god, and Thoth is the protection of all my flesh.

Book of the Dead, spell 42 [30]
43. Prevents decapitation in the afterlife and identifies the deceased with Osiris. "I am a flame, the son of a flame, to whom was given his head after it had been cut off. the head of Osiris shall not be taken from him, and my head shall not be taken from me." [31]
44. For 'Not dying a second time in the realm of the dead'. [29]
45. To prevent putrefaction. [32]
46. To prevent perishing. [29]
47. To prevent the deceased's place being taken. [29]
48. To go out justified. [33]
49. To go out against one's enemies in the underworld. [33]
50. To escape from the slaughter-place. [29]
51. To not go upside down in the underworld. [33] [34]
52. To not eat excrement in the underworld. [33]
53. To not eat excrement or drink urine in the underworld. [33]

54–63: Empowering to breathe and drink

54. Giving the deceased power over air or water [35]
55. 'For giving breath', that is allowing the deceased to breathe once more [36]
56. Giving the deceased power over air or water [35]
57. Giving the deceased the power to breathe air and to have power over water. [37]
58. Giving the deceased the power to breathe air and to have power over water. [38]
59. Giving the deceased the power to breathe in air and to have power over water. It is addressed to the sycomore fig tree, symbol of the sky-goddess Nut, and reads:

'O you sycomore of the sky, may there be given to me the air which is in it, for I am he who sought out that throne in the midst of Wenu [Hermopolis]. I have guarded this egg of the Great Cackler. If it grows, I grow; if it lives, I life; if it breathes air, I breathe air. [39]

60. Giving the deceased the power to breathe air and to have power. over water. [37]
61. 'For not letting a man's soul be taken away.' [36]
62. 'For drinking water in the realm of the dead.' [36]
63A. 'For drinking water and not being burnt by fire.' [37]
63B. Prevents the owner from being scalded. [35]

64–89: Coming Forth by Day

64. Going out by day, in a single formula. [33]
65. For 'coming forth by day' and having power over enemies. [37]
66. Going out into the day. [40]
67. Spell for opening the tomb. [40]
68. For 'coming forth by day' and ensuring power. Part reads:

May I have power in my heart, may I have power in my arms, may I have power in my legs, may I have power in my mouth, may I have power in all my members may I have power over invocation-offerings, may I have power over water ... air ... the waters ... streams ... riparian lands ... men who would harm me ... women who would harm me in the realm of the dead ... those who would give orders to harm me upon earth.

'Book of the Dead, spell 68. [37]
69. Spell for being the successor of Osiris. [41]
70. An alternate version of Spell 69. [42]
71. For 'coming forth by day'. [43]
72. Spell for going out into the day and opening up the tomb. [44]
73. For opening the west by day, for opening the chamber (repeated as chapter 9). [33]
74. Spell for being swift-footed when going out from the earth. [45]
75. Spell for going to Heliopolis and receiving a throne there. [45]
76. Enables transformation into any form desired. This is the first of a group of 'transformation spells', 76–88, which are about giving the deceased the power to take a number of different forms, enabling them to travel the world of the living during the day and returning to the underworld at night. [46]
77. Spell for being transformed into a falcon of gold. [45]
78. Spell for being transformed into a divine falcon. This spell is in dramatic form, with various characters, such as Osiris, Horus, a messenger, and "The Double Lion". It appears to be part of the text as a religious drama recited as a temple ritual. Here it is used simply as a magic spell. [47]
79. Spell for becoming an elder of the tribunal. [48]
80. Making transformation into a god and giving light and darkness. [48]
81A. Spell for being transformed into a lotus. [49]
81B. Spell for being transformed into a lotus. [49]
82. Spell for becoming Ptah, eating bread, drinking beer, purifying the hinder-parts, and being alive in Heliopolis. [50]
83. Spell for being transformed into a phoenix. [50]
84. Spell for being transformed into a heron. [51]
85. Spell for being transformed into a living soul and not entering into the place of execution. [52]
86. Spell for being transformed into a swallow. [53]
87. Spell for being transformed into a snake. [54]
88. Spell for being transformed into a crocodile. [54]
89. Allowed the ba-spirit of the deceased to rejoin the deceased. Typically with a vignette showing the ba, represented as a bird with a human head, flying over a mummy. Reads:

Come for my soul, O you wardens of the sky! If you delay letting my soul see my corpse, you will find the eye of Horus standing up thus against you ... The sacred barque will be joyful and the great god will proceed in peace when you allow this soul of mine to ascend vindicated to the gods... May it see my corpse, may it rest on my mummy, which will never be destroyed or perish.

Book of the Dead, spell 89. [55]

90–123: Navigating the Underworld

90. Spell for removing foolish speech from the mouth. This spell admonishes and repels an evil entity that "cut[s] off heads and sever[s] necks". [56]
91. Spell for not restraining a person's soul in the realm of the dead. [57]
92. Spell for opening the tomb to a shade so that he may go out into the day and have power in his legs. [58]
93. Spell for not letting a person be ferried over to the East in the realm of the dead. [59]
94. Spell for requesting a water-pot and a palette. [59]
95. Spell for being beside Thoth. [59]
96. Spell for being beside Thoth. [59]
97. Spell for causing a man to be a spirit in the realm of the dead. [59]
98–99. Allowed the deceased to use ferryboats in the Underworld. [60]
100–2. Regarding the deceased's journey on the barque of Ra. [60]
103. Spell for being in the presence of Hathor. Reads: "I am one who passes by, pure and bald; O Sistrum-player, I will be in the suite of Hathor." [61]
104. Spell for sitting among the great gods. [62]
105. To satisfy the ka. The ka required offerings of food, water, natron, and incense; these were shown being supplied in the vignette to this spell. These offerings also help to cleanse the ka of any wrongdoing. [38]
106. Spell for giving gifts to one in Memphis and in the realm of the dead. [62]
107. For going in and out from the gate of the westerners. [33]
108–9. Ensures the deceased knows the souls of West and East. [63] 109 also refers to the paradisical 'Field of Reeds'.
110. A depiction of the 'Field of Reeds', an afterlife in a land of plenty largely similar to the land of the living. Typically illustrated with a large vignette. [64]
111. For knowing the powers of Pe. [33]
112–6. Names of the souls of sacred locations in Egypt; Pe, Nekhen, Hermopolis, and Heliopolis. [63]
117. Spell for taking the road in Rosetjau. [65]
118. Spell for arriving in Rosetjau. [65]
119. Spell for going forth from Rosetjau. [65]
120. For going in and out (repeated as chapter 12). [33]
121. For going in after going out (repeated as chapter 13). [33]
122. Spell for entering after coming out. [65]
123. Spell for entering into the Great Mansion. [66]

124-6: Judgement

124. Spell for going down to the Tribunal of Osiris. [66]
125. This spell describes the Weighing of the Heart judgement ritual. The deceased is led by Anubis into the presence of Osiris, and there makes a 'negative confession', saying that he is innocent of a list of 42 crimes, in front of 42 judges. His heart is then weighed against a feather, representing truth, justice, and the goddess Ma'at. If he is innocent, he is led to Osiris; a demon called Ammut, the Devourer, stands by to eat the heart of the guilty. [67]
126. An additional judgement ritual, sometimes also depicted in the vignette to spell 125. The deceased approaches a lake of fire guarded by four baboons. If the deceased was evil, they would be burned by the flames; however, the blessed dead received nourishment from it. [68]

127–143: Journeys in the Duat and on the Barque of Ra

127. 'Worshipping the gods of the caverns'; instructions on how to deal with supernatural entities who the deceased had to pass on his way. Part reads: "O you door-keepers who guard your portals, who swallow souls and who gulp down the corpses of the dead who pass you by when they are allotted to the House of Destruction... May you guide [the deceased], may you open the portals for him, may the earth open its caverns to him, may you make him triumphant over his enemies". [69]
128. Spell for worshipping Osiris. [70]
129. Refers to the barque of Ra. [71]
130. Made the disparate parts of the deceased's being into an effective akh with an eternal ba. [72] 130–136 (including 136A and 136B) all illustrate the journey of the deceased in the solar barque, and could be illustrated with the same vignette, perhaps indicating some repetition. [73]
131. Spell for being in the presence of Ra. [74]
132. Spell for causing a man to turn about in order to see his house upon earth. [75]
133. Writing for making a spirit worthy, to be recited on the first of the month. [75]
134. 'For making a spirit worthy'; a funerary spell, to be pronounced by the living, to help the deceased triumph over their enemies. Reads:

To be spoken over a falcon standing with the White Crown on his head; Atum, Shu and Tefnut, Geb and Nut, Osiris and Isis, Seth and Nepthys being drawn in ochre on a new bowl placed in the sacred barque, together with an image of this spirit (ba) whom you wish to be made worthy, it being anointed with oil. Offer to them incense on the fire and roasted ducks, and worship Ra. It means that he for whom this is done will voyage and be with Ra every day in every place he desires to travel, and it means that the enemies of Ra will be driven off in very deed. A matter a million times true.

Book of the Dead, spell 134. [76]
135. Another spell to be said when the moon is new on the first day of the month. [77]
136A. Another spell for making a spirit worthy on the Festival of the Sixth Day. [78]
136B. Spell for sailing in the Great Barque of Ra and for passing over the circle of fire. [79]
137A. Like Spell 30B, this spell was allegedly first said to have been found by Prince Horjedef of the 4th Dynasty. [80] Spell for four torches for the ceremonies which are carried out for a spirit. You shall make four basins of clay beaten up with incense and filled with milk of a white cow; the torches are to be quenched in them. [81]
137B. The birth-goddess Ipet drives off Set using a flaming torch. [82]
138. Spell for entering Abydos and being in suite of Osiris. [83]
139. Hymn to Atum (repeated as chapter 123) [33]
140. Book to be recruited in the second month of winter, last day, when completing the Sacred Eye in the month of winter, last day. [83]
141. Book to be spoken on the day of the Festival of the New Moon. [83]
142. Book for making the transfigured spirit excellent, enabling hi to proceed free in his steps, to go out by day, in any form he wishes, to know the names of Osiris in all his places where he may wish to be [33]
143. (illustration after the litany covering chapters 141-142) [33]

144–150: Gates, caverns, mounds, and guardians

144. Lists the names of the creatures serving as keeper, guard, and announcer at each of seven gates. their names are fairly terrifying, for instance "He who lives on snakes", or "Hippopotamus-faced, raging of power". By knowing these gates, the deceased can persuade them to let him through. To the guardians the deceased says:

O you gates, you who keep the gates because of Osiris, O you who guard them and who report the affairs of the Two Lands to Osiris every day; I know you and I know your names.

Book of the Dead, spell 144 [84]
If uttered correctly, this spell ensures "he will not be driven off or turned away at the portals of the Netherworld". [84]
145. An alternative form of 146. [85]
146. Describes twenty-one 'portals of the House of Osiris in the Field of Reeds', each with a deity and a door-keeper. The names and descriptions of these entities are more elaborate and just as terrifying as those in 144. [86]
147. A gate spell. [87]
148. 'For making provision for a spirit in the realm of the dead'. This spell provided the names of the Bull of Heaven and his seven cows, providing an eternal supply of food and beer.

The names of the cattle are:

Mansion of Kas, Mistress of All.

Silent One who dwells in her place

She of Chemmis whom the god ennobled

The Much Beloved, red of hair

She who protects in life, the particoloured.

She whose name has power in her craft.

Storm in the sky which wafts the god aloft

The bull, husband of the cows.

Book of the Dead, Spell 148. [88]
149. A lengthy spell which lists 14 mounds which the deceased would have to pass in the underworld. As with the gates of spells 144–7, these mounds are guarded by gods and monsters. [89]
150. Has no text, but is a pictorial summary of the mounds in the Underworld. However, in this spell there are 15 mounds, while in 149 there are only 14. [90]

151–189: Amuletic and protective spells

Illustration for spell 151 on a coffin, ca. 710-680 BC Buitenkist van Petisis - Google Art Project.jpg
Illustration for spell 151 on a coffin, ca. 710–680 BC
151. Regarding the protection of the deceased in their tomb. This spell consists of a very large illustration, made up of a number of smaller images and texts, many of which derive from the older Coffin Texts. The purpose of this spell is to collect together the magical aids which were required for a burial, and also to perpetuate the protective funerary rituals. Some of these texts were also used on coffins, or on mud bricks placed in niches in the walls of a high-status funeral chamber. [91]
152. Spell for building a mansion on earth. [92]
153A and 153B. These spells both deal with the risk of being caught in a trap, a giant net which stretches between heaven and earth. [55]
154. 'For not letting the corpse perish'; this spell describes the decomposition of the body, but assures the deceased that they will triumph over it. [22]
155. For a djed pillar amulet. [93]
156. For an Isis knot amulet. [93]
157. For an amuletic golden vulture collar. [94]
158. For an amuletic golden falcon collar. [94]
159. For a papyrus column amulet. [94]
160. For a papyrus column amulet. [94]
161. Describes how the four winds are released through openings in the sky to give the dead person the breath of life. Often combined with passages from spell 151 [95]
162. A spell to cause to come into being a flame beneath the head of a spirit. [96] 162 through 174 appear to have been composed during the Late Period. [16]
163. Spell for preventing a man's corpse from putrefying in the realm of the dead in order to rescue him from the eater of souls. [97]
164. A spell to preserve a person's body after death, to be said over a figurine of three-headed Mut. [98]
165. Spell for mooring and noth letting the Sacred Eye be injured, for maintaining the corpse and drinking water. [99]
166. Spell for a headrest and to prevent decapitation. [99]
167. Spell for bringing a Sacred Eye. [100]
168. This spell lists the gods and monsters of the caverns in Osiris's domain. [100]
169. Spell for erecting a bier. [101]
170. Spell for assembling a bier. [102]
171. Spell for donning a pure garment. [102]
172. Here begin the spells of praising which are made in the realm of the dead. [102]
173. A long list of greetings from Horus to Osiris. [103]
174. Spell for letter a spirit go out from the great gate in the sky. [104]
175. Spell for not dying again. [105]
176. Another spell for not dying again. [105]
177. Spell for raising up a spirit and causing a soul to live in the realm of the dead. [105]
178. Spell for raising the corpse, for having power in the eyes and ears and making the head firm when it has been set in its proper place. [106]
179. Spell for leaving yesterday and coming into today, which he asks himself and his members. [107]
180. Spell for going about the day, worshipping Ra in the West and giving praise to those who are in the Netherworld. [107]
181. Spell for going into the tribunal of Osiris and the gods who govern the Netherworld. [108]
182. A rare spell titled 'Book for the permanence of Osiris, giving breath to the inert One in the present of Thoth, and repelling the enemy of Osiris'. This spell invokes the power of Thoth in order to ensure the mummy of the deceased is protected by a large number of gods and spirits, who are similar in appearance to the fearsome guardians of the gates, caverns and mounds mentioned in earlier spells. [109]
183. Spell for worhsipping Osiris. [110]
184. For being beside Osiris. [33]
185. A hymn to Osiris. [111]
186. A hymn to Hathor. [112]
187. Spell for going in to the Ennead. [112]
188. Sending a soul, building tomb-chambers, and going out into the day among men. [112]
189. For not eating faeces or drinking urine. [34]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ammit</span> Ancient Egyptian Demoness Goddess

Ammit was an ancient Egyptian goddess with the forequarters of a lion, the hindquarters of a hippopotamus, and the head of a crocodile—the three largest "man-eating" animals known to ancient Egyptians. In ancient Egyptian religion, Ammit played an important role during the funerary ritual, the Judgment of the Dead.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Duat</span> Underworld in Egyptian mythology

The Duat, also called Amenthes or Te, is the underworld in ancient Egyptian mythology. It has been represented in hieroglyphs as a star-in-circle: 𓇽. The god Osiris was believed to be the lord of the underworld. He was the first mummy as depicted in the Osiris myth and he personified rebirth and life after death. The underworld was also the residence of various other gods along with Osiris.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nehebkau</span> Ancient Egyptian deity

Nehebkau was the primordial snake god in ancient Egyptian mythology. Although originally considered an evil spirit, he later functions as a funerary god associated with the afterlife. As one of the forty-two assessors of Ma’at, Nehebkau was believed to judge the deceased after death and provide their souls with ka – the part of the soul that distinguished the living from the dead.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ancient Egyptian conception of the soul</span>

The ancient Egyptians believed that a soul was made up of many parts. In addition to these components of the soul, there was the human body.

<i>Book of the Dead</i> Ancient Egyptian funerary text

The Book of the Dead is the name given to an ancient Egyptian funerary text generally written on papyrus and used from the beginning of the New Kingdom to around 50 BC. "Book" is the closest term to describe the loose collection of texts consisting of a number of magic spells intended to assist a dead person's journey through the Duat, or underworld, and into the afterlife and written by many priests over a period of about 1,000 years. In 1842, the Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius introduced for these texts the German name Todtenbuch, translated to English as 'Book of the Dead'. The original Egyptian name for the text, transliterated rw nw prt m hrw, is translated as Spells of Coming Forth by Day.

The Amduat[pronunciation?] is an important ancient Egyptian funerary text of the New Kingdom of Egypt. Similar to previous funerary texts, such as the Old Kingdom's Pyramid Texts, or the First Intermediate Period's Coffin Texts, the Amduat was found carved on the internal walls of a pharaoh's tomb. Unlike other funerary texts, however, it was reserved almost exclusively for pharaohs until the Twenty-first Dynasty, or very select nobility.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eye of Horus</span> Ancient Egyptian symbol of protection, royal power and good health

The Eye of Horus, also known as left wedjat eye or udjat eye, specular to the Eye of Ra, is a concept and symbol in ancient Egyptian religion that represents well-being, healing, and protection. It derives from the mythical conflict between the god Horus with his rival Set, in which Set tore out or destroyed one or both of Horus's eyes and the eye was subsequently healed or returned to Horus with the assistance of another deity, such as Thoth. Horus subsequently offered the eye to his deceased father Osiris, and its revitalizing power sustained Osiris in the afterlife. The Eye of Horus was thus equated with funerary offerings, as well as with all the offerings given to deities in temple ritual. It could also represent other concepts, such as the moon, whose waxing and waning was likened to the injury and restoration of the eye.

The Book of Gates is an ancient Egyptian funerary text dating from the New Kingdom. The Book of Gates is long and detailed, consisting of one hundred scenes. It narrates the passage of a newly deceased soul into the next world journeying with the sun god, Ra, through the underworld during the hours of the night towards his resurrection. The soul is required to pass through a series of 'gates' at each hour of the journey. Each gate is guarded by a different serpent deity that is associated with a different goddess. It is important that the deceased knows the names of each guardian. Depictions of the judgment of the dead are shown in the last three hours. The text implies that some people will pass through unharmed, but others will suffer torment in a lake of fire. At the end of Ra's journey through the underworld, he emerges anew to take his place back in the sky.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coffin Texts</span> Collection of ancient Egyptian funerary spells

The Coffin Texts are a collection of ancient Egyptian funerary spells written on coffins beginning in the First Intermediate Period. They are partially derived from the earlier Pyramid Texts, reserved for royal use only, but contain substantial new material related to everyday desires, indicating a new target audience of common people. Coffin texts are dated back to 2100 BCE. Ordinary Egyptians who could afford a coffin had access to these funerary spells and the pharaoh no longer had exclusive rights to an afterlife.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Four sons of Horus</span> Ancient Egyptian gods

The four sons of Horus were a group of four deities in ancient Egyptian religion who were believed to protect deceased people in the afterlife. Beginning in the First Intermediate Period of Egyptian history, Imsety, Hapy, Duamutef, and Qebehsenuef were especially connected with the four canopic jars that housed the internal organs that were removed from the body of the deceased during the process of mummification. Most commonly, Imsety protected the liver, Hapy the lungs, Duamutef the stomach, and Qebehsenuef the intestines, but this pattern often varied. The canopic jars were given lids that represented the heads of the sons of Horus. Although they were originally portrayed as humans, in the latter part of the New Kingdom, they took on their most distinctive iconography, in which Imsety is portrayed as a human, Hapy as a baboon, Duamutef as a jackal, and Qebehsenuef as a falcon. The four sons were also linked with stars in the sky, with regions of Egypt, and with the cardinal directions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu</span> Ancient Egyptian wooden stele

The Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu or Stele of Revealing is a painted, wooden offering stele located in Cairo, Egypt. It was discovered in 1858 by the French Egyptologist François Auguste Ferdinand Mariette at the mortuary temple of the 18th Dynasty Pharaoh Hatshepsut, located at Deir el-Bahari. It was originally made for the Montu-priest Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu i, and was discovered near his coffin ensemble of two sarcophagi and two anthropomorphic inner coffins. It dates to circa 680–70 BCE, the period of the late 25th Dynasty/early 26th Dynasty. Originally located in the former Boulaq Museum under inventory number 666, the stele was moved around 1902 to the newly opened Egyptian Museum of Cairo, where it remains today.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Egyptian mythology</span>

Egyptian mythology is the collection of myths from ancient Egypt, which describe the actions of the Egyptian gods as a means of understanding the world around them. The beliefs that these myths express are an important part of ancient Egyptian religion. Myths appear frequently in Egyptian writings and art, particularly in short stories and in religious material such as hymns, ritual texts, funerary texts, and temple decoration. These sources rarely contain a complete account of a myth and often describe only brief fragments.

The Egyptian Book of the Dead of Qenna is a papyrus document housed at the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden. One of several thousand papyri containing material drawn from Book of the Dead funerary texts, Qenna uniquely includes a passage that describes a deceased person's activity in an afterlife location it calls the “house of hearts.” While the house of hearts is mentioned in at least two tomb inscriptions, Qenna treats it in more detail. The passage appears as an addendum within Spell 151 of the Book of the Dead:

"You will enter the house of hearts, the place which is full of hearts. You will take the one that is yours and put it in its place, without your hand being hindered. Your foot will not be stopped from walking. You will not walk upside down. You will walk upright."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ancient Egyptian afterlife beliefs</span>

Ancient Egyptian afterlife beliefs were centered around a variety of complex rituals that were influenced by many aspects of Egyptian culture. Religion was a major contributor, since it was an important social practice that bound all Egyptians together. For instance, many of the Egyptian gods played roles in guiding the souls of the dead through the afterlife. With the evolution of writing, religious ideals were recorded and quickly spread throughout the Egyptian community. The solidification and commencement of these doctrines were formed in the creation of afterlife texts which illustrated and explained what the dead would need to know in order to complete the journey safely.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gate deities of the underworld</span> Ancient Egyptian deities

The gate deities of the underworld were ancient Egyptian minor deities charged with guarding the gates of the Egyptian underworld.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assessors of Maat</span> 42 minor ancient Egyptian deities

The Assessors of Maat were 42 minor ancient Egyptian deities of the Maat charged with judging the souls of the dead in the afterlife by joining the judgment of Osiris in the Weighing of the Heart.

References

Notes

  1. Taylor 2010, p.93
  2. Faulkner 1985, p.34
  3. 1 2 3 4 Taylor 2010, p.88
  4. Faulkner 1985, p.35
  5. 1 2 3 4 Faulkner 1985, p.36
  6. Faulkner 1985, p.192
  7. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.43
  8. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.184
  9. 1 2 3 4 Faulkner 1985, p.37
  10. Faulkner 1985, p.39
  11. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.89
  12. Taylor 2010, p.89, p.246 9
  13. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p. 35
  14. Taylor 2010, p.51
  15. Taylor 2010, p.53
  16. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.272
  17. Taylor 2010, p.215
  18. Faulkner 1985, p.50
  19. Taylor 2010, p.163
  20. Taylor 2010, p.161, 172
  21. Taylor 2010, p.162
  22. 1 2 3 4 Taylor 2010, p.161
  23. Taylor 2010, p.174
  24. Taylor 2010, p.234
  25. Taylor 2010, p.209
  26. Taylor 2010, p.185
  27. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.194
  28. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Taylor 2010, p.186
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 Taylor 2010, p.188
  30. Taylor 2010, p.162–3
  31. Taylor 2010, p.75, 161
  32. Taylor 2010, p.161, 188
  33. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Quirke, Stephen. "Book of the Dead". University College London. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
  34. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.190
  35. 1 2 3 Taylor 2010, p.165
  36. 1 2 3 Taylor 2010, p.175
  37. 1 2 3 4 5 Taylor 2010, p.171
  38. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.164
  39. Taylor 2010, p.176
  40. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.69
  41. Faulkner 1985, p.70
  42. Faulkner 1985, p.71
  43. Taylor 2010, p.75
  44. Faulkner 1985, p.72
  45. 1 2 3 Faulkner 1985, p.73
  46. Taylor 2010, p.166
  47. Faulkner 1985, p.74
  48. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.78
  49. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.79
  50. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.80
  51. Faulkner 1985, p.81
  52. Faulkner 1985, p.82
  53. Faulkner 1985, p.83
  54. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.84
  55. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.189
  56. Faulkner 1985, p.85
  57. Faulkner 1985, p.86
  58. Faulkner 1985, p.87
  59. 1 2 3 4 5 Faulkner 1985, p.88
  60. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.57
  61. Faulkner 1985, p.100
  62. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.101
  63. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.140
  64. Taylor 2010, p.259, 266
  65. 1 2 3 4 Faulkner 1985, p.113
  66. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.114
  67. Taylor 2010, p.206–9
  68. Taylor 2010, p.217
  69. Taylor 2010, p.132, 136
  70. Faulkner 1985, p.116
  71. Taylor 2010, p.240
  72. Taylor 2010, p. 165
  73. Taylor 2010, p. 273
  74. Faulkner 1985, p.120
  75. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.121
  76. Taylor 2010, p. 48
  77. Faulkner 1985, p.123
  78. Faulkner 1985, p.124
  79. Faulkner 1985, p.126
  80. Taylor 2010, p.35
  81. Faulkner 1985, p.127
  82. Taylor 2010, p. 252
  83. 1 2 3 Faulkner 1985, p.132
  84. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p. 136
  85. Taylor 2010, p. 143
  86. Taylor 2010, p. 137
  87. Taylor 2010, p. 134
  88. Taylor 2010, p. 140, 152–3
  89. Taylor 2010, p.138, p.146
  90. Taylor 2010, p.146
  91. Taylor 2010, p.147–8
  92. Faulkner 1985, p.149
  93. 1 2 Taylor 2010, p.128
  94. 1 2 3 4 Taylor 2010, p.131
  95. Taylor 2010, p.116
  96. Faulkner 1985, p.156
  97. Faulkner 1985, p.158
  98. Faulkner 1985, p.160
  99. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.161
  100. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.162
  101. Faulkner 1985, p.166
  102. 1 2 3 Faulkner 1985, p.170
  103. Faulkner 1985, p.172
  104. Faulkner 1985, p.173
  105. 1 2 3 Faulkner 1985, p.175
  106. Faulkner 1985, p.176
  107. 1 2 Faulkner 1985, p.177
  108. Faulkner 1985, p.180
  109. Taylor 2010, p.190,199
  110. Faulkner 1985, p.184
  111. Taylor 2010, p.252
  112. 1 2 3 Faulkner 1985, p.185

    Bibliography

    Faulkner, Raymond O. (translator), Andrews, Carol (editor), The Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead. British Museum Publications, 46 Bloomsbury Street, London, Revised Edition 1985. ISBN   0-7141-0938-X

    Taylor, John H. (translator), Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead: Journey through the afterlife. British Museum Press, London, 2010. ISBN   978-0-7141-1993-9

    Further reading