ancient egypt mortuary practices and beliefs. scenes from harkhuf’s tomb at qubbet el- hawa (6 th...

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Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs

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Page 1: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Ancient EgyptMortuary Practices and Beliefs

Page 2: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el-Hawa (6th Dyn)

Page 3: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

The antechamber of Tutankhamun's Tomb (18th Dyn): photograph by Harry Burton, drawing by Howard Carter, 1922; plans of the tomb

Page 4: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Painted niche-stone, Saqqara

Page 5: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Offering scene on the outer coffin of Prince Djehutynakht (late 11th or early 12th Dynasty) painted cedar wood, 115 × 263 cm; Museum of Fine Arts

Page 6: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Tomb of Meketre, Thebes (12th Dyn) with shabtis in model granary (Met); photograph by Harry Burton, 1920

Page 7: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

One of 399 shabti that Petrie found in the tomb of Horudja at Hawara near Faiyum and its spell (30th Dyn); Manchester MuseumThe illuminated one, the Osiris, the Priest of Neith, Horudja, born to Shedet, justified, he says: O these ushabtis, if counted upon, the Osiris, the Priest of Neith, Horudja, born to Shedet, justified, to do all the works that are to be done there in the realm of the dead – now indeed obstacles are implanted there – as a man at his duties, “here I am!” you shall say when you are counted upon at any time to serve there, to cultivate the fields, to irrigate the river banks, to ferry the sand of the west to the east and vice–versa, “here I am” you shall say.

Trans Glenn Janes

Page 8: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Egyptian mummies in the British museum

Page 9: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Khnum creating a man; Roman Birth House of the Temple of Hathor in Dendera

ka and ba

Page 10: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

The "weighing of the heart," from the Book of the Dead of Hunefer (19th Dyn); British Museum

Page 11: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Judgment scene from the Book of the Dead.of Hunefer: Egypt’s fourteen gods seated in judgment; Anubis brings Hunefer into the judgment hall; Anubis weighs his heart as Ammit awaits the result and Thoth records; Horus presents Hunefer to Osiris, seated in his shrine with Isis and NephthysBritish Museum

Page 12: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Natural mummy from Gebelein: one of six pit burials and a reconstruction in the British Museum (Naqada II, ca 3500)

Page 13: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Structure of a mastaba

Tomb of Den

Page 14: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Map of SaqqaraTomb 3357 (1st Dyn)Tomb 2302 (2d Dyn)Royal Tomb B (2d Dyn)

Page 15: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Niche-stones from Saqqara (2d Dyn)

Page 16: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Djoser’s Step Pyramid complex (3d Dyn)The serdab

Page 17: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)
Page 18: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

The pyramids of Giza: Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure (4th Dyn)

Page 19: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Giza pyramid plateau showing quarries and construction debris and hypothetical outlines of the construction ramps

Page 20: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Teti’s pyramid at Saqqara (6th Dyn)

Page 21: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Plan of Saqqara

Page 22: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Floor plan of the mastaba of Ti, Saqqara (5th Dyn)

1: Portico with two pillars2: First serdab, visible through two narrow windows from the portico and from the courtyard3: Pillared courtyard; a: false door of Demedj, Ti’s son4: First corridor; b: false door of Nefer-Hetep-es (Neferhetepes), Ti’s wife, aligned with her tomb shaft (no. 9)5: Second corridor6: Storeroom7: The chapel for Ti; c, d: false doors of Ti, aligned with his burial chamber (C)8: Second serdab, visible through three narrow windows from the chapel9: Tomb shaft for Nefer-Hetep-es (Neferhetepes), Ti’s wifeThe red outline outlines Ti’s burial chamber below the mastaba.A: descent from the courtyardB: sloping corridorC: burial chamber withD: Ti’s stone sarcophagus

Page 23: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

View into the serdab of Ti’s mastaba, details of the walls, and one of the false doors

Page 24: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el-Hawa (6th Dyn)

Page 25: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Tombs at Qubbet el-Hawa (6th Dyn)

Page 26: Ancient Egypt Mortuary Practices and Beliefs. Scenes from Harkhuf’s tomb at Qubbet el- Hawa (6 th Dyn)

Palaeolithic 700,000-7000 BCE

Saharan Neolithic 8800-4700Early 8800-6800Middle 6600-5100Late 5100-4700

Predynastic 5300-3000 Lower Egypt

Neolithic 5300-4000Maadi 4000-3200

Upper EgyptBadarian 4400-4000Naqada I 4000-3500 (Amratian)Naqada II 3500-3200 (Gerzean)Naqada III 3200-3000 (Dynasty 0)

1ST Persian Period (27th-30th) 525-4042d Persian Period 343-332Ptolemaic Period 332-30

Macedonian332-310Ptolemaic 305-30

Roman 30 BCE-642 CE