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Egyptian Mythology

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Written in 3 languages, Greek, demotic script, and heiroglyphics ... Pharaoh was often referred to as the living incarnation of the god Horus. Anubis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Egyptian Mythology


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Egyptian Mythology
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From the Sands of Time
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At first, it was all a mystery.
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Heiroglyphics Demotic Greek
The Rosetta Stone
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The Rosetta Stone
  • Contains a resolution by priests in honor of the
    young monarch, Ptolemy V, when he ascended the
    throne.
  • Written in 3 languages, Greek, demotic script,
    and heiroglyphics
  • Translated by Jean François Champolion

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Cartouche
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Traditions
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Stepped Pyramid
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Rural Area
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Egyptian art was usually symmetrical.
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Carving Harvest Time
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Harvesting the crops.
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Harvesting. Note the scribes at the right
keeping a record of the harvest amounts.
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Making Bread
Note the traditional basket above with the grain
for the bread.
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The Home
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Playing Senet
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The Nile
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Major Areas
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Giza
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Pyramids at Giza
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Valley of the Kings
  • An alternate burial area when the Pharaohs
    decided that their previous attempts at eternal
    burial were unsuccessful.

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Karnak
  • Religious center with large, ornate temples

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Temple at Karnak
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The Gods of Ancient Egypt
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Ra
  • Sun god
  • Father of the gods

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Osiris
  • God of the Dead.
  • The symbol of resurrection and eternal life.
  • Provider of fertility and prosperity to the
    living.
  • Husband / Brother of Isis

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A princess raises her hands in adoration of
Osiris.
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Isis
  • The great mother-goddess
  • Not extinguished with the other Egyptian gods,
    but was embraced by the Greeks and Romans
  • Her worship has even lasted into the present day.

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Horus
  • Pharaoh was often referred to as the living
    incarnation of the god Horus

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Anubis
  • Guardian of the Necropolis
  • Saw that the beam of the great scale was in the
    proper position as he supervised the weighing of
    the heart of a deceased person
  • It was believed he could foresee a persons
    destiny in this role he was the announcer of
    death

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Thoth
  • The inventor of spoken and written language he
    was the scribe of the gods and patron of all
    scribes
  • Invented astronomy, geometry and medicine
  • Recorded the results of the weighing of the
    deceased's heart against the feather of Maat
  • Wrote the Book of the Dead

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A Scribe In a society where few could read or
write, the scribe was revered members of society.
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Maat
  • Goddess of Truth Female counterpart of Thoth
  • The judgement of the dead was performed by
    weighing one's heart (conscience) against the
    feather of Maat. If a balance was struck the
    deceased was deemed to be worthy of meeting
    Osiris in the after life

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Ammut
  • A female demonwho would devour the souls of those
    whose hearts proved heavier than the feather of
    Maat
  • A terrifying prospect It meant the end of
    existence. They would never meet Osiris and live
    forever in the Fields of Peace (Sekhet-Hetepet).

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Sekhet-Hetepet
  • Ani pays his respects to the gods who dwell in
    Sekhet-Hetepet (Fields of Peace) and asks the
    gods to help him to enter into Sekhet-Hetepet so
    that he may "become a khu, drink, plow, reap,
    fight, make love,never be in a state of servitude
    and always be in a position of authority
    therein". From the Papyrus of Ani. (c. 1400 B.C.)
    The British Museum London

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A Farmers Tomb
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The Pharaoh Inknaton. Unlike the often warlike
poses of the monarchs, Inknaton is often depicted
with flowers and in a relaxed posture.
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Khepri
  • A sun god, associated with the sunrise. Because
    of his association with the sunrise he is
    considered to be one of the creator gods. It was
    Khepri that pushed the sun across the sky in much
    the same fashion that a dung beetle (scarab)
    pushed a ball of dung across the ground.

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Bast
  • A sun goddess who represents the warm, life
    giving power of the sun
  • Protector of cats

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Sekhmet
  • A sun goddess who represents the scorching,
    burning, destructive heat of the sun
  • A fierce goddess of war, the destroyer of the
    enemies of Ra and Osiris
  • Her temper was uncontrollable
  • she would have destroyed all of mankind if Ra had
    not taken pity and made her drunk

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Hapi
  • God of the Nile, particularly the inundation
  • Thought to flow through the Underworld, through
    the heavens, and then through Egypt
  • His followers worshipped him even above Ra

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Book of the Dead
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A village Along the Nile
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Burial
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Mummification
  • Perhaps first conceived through observation on
    the effect of the arid conditions on the dead
  • A long process
  • Preparation of the body for continuation in an
    afterlife
  • see handouts from http//members.aol.com/egyptar
    t/mummy.html

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Canopic Jars
From left to right they are
Imsety The human headed guardian of the liver
Qebekh-sennuef The falcon headed
guardian of the intestines. Hapy
The baboon headed guardian of the lungs
Duamutef The jackal or wild dog headed
guardian of the stomach.
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A carved wooden figure of a nobleman. So that he
would have youth and energy in the afterlife, he
was carved as a young, vibrant man. This is a
stark contrast to the fact that Nakhti (the man
shown) was an old man when he died. Like modern
images at funerals, he wanted to be remembered
when he was young.
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You CAN take it with you...
Hippopotamus Tomb object probably meant to evoke
the concept of the Nile. The decorative lotus
leaves help push the concept of rebirth.
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Ankh
Pharaoh with Isis who presents the Ankh.
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Sphinx
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Sphinx
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Sphinx
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There are other Sphinx statues besides the on in
Giza.
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King Tuts Tomb
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Mask King Tut
Note the ceremonial beard in tribute to the god
Osiris. The face seems to be relaxed and at
peace. He wears the ceremonial burial headdress.
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King Tut Pendant
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More about the Pendant
Two deities guard the sacred eye. On the right,
the serpent goddess, symbol of Lower Egypt, wears
the crown of the north. On the left, is the
vulture goddess, symbol of Upper Egypt wearing
the crown of the south
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Pharaoh
  • Hatshepsut (at right)
  • Cheops
  • Tutankhamen
  • Rameses II
  • Cleopatra

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The End of the Egyptian Dynasties
  • As the Roman empire grew, it found the riches of
    Egypt. A last battle found Cleopatras forces
    defeated and she committed suicide. It was the
    end.

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