Panorama of funerary religion in ancient Egypt

The double post mortem of ancient Egyptians

Authors

  • Cintia Alfieri Gama-Rolland Fmu EPHE museu nacional

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21901/2448-3060/self-2021.vol06.0003

Keywords:

History, Civilization, Religius Practices, Death Rites

Abstract

Among the civilizations of antiquity, the Egyptian is one of those that offers the most testimonies and draws attention for its archeological and textual traces of a funerary character. Considering the material sources alone, their funerary cult can be observed in their monumental stone constructions, excavated tombs, funerary complexes or even objects of various shapes and purposes such as sarcophagi, coffins, canopic jars or funerary figurines. Besides the documents already mentioned, there are numerous written sources about the Egyptian funerary cult describing both, the cosmogony and the crafting of amulets, spells and guides for life after death. Considering the extent of the Egyptian religion, this article aimed to provide a brief view of the funerary religion in ancient Egypt from textual sources. Naturally, there was no intention here to examine this entire religious universe, which on its own would require another volume. Therefore, we aimed to present the three main corpora of funerary texts and then analyze post mortem destinies.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Assmann, J. (2000). Images et rites de la mort dans l'égipte ancienne: l'apport des liturgies funéraires. Paris: Ed. Cybèle.

Barguet, P. (1967). Le livre des morts des anciens egyptiens. Paris: Les Editions du Cerf.

Breasted, J. H. (1970). Development of religion and tought in Ancient Egypt. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. (Trabalho original publicado em 1912).

Budge, E. A. (1999). O livro egípcio dos mortos. São Paulo: Ed. Pensamento.

Carrier, C. (2004). Textes des sarcophages du Moyen Empire égyptien (Vol. 2, spells 355 a 787. Paris: Editions du Rocher.

Davies, W. (1977). The ascension-myth in the Pyramid texts. Journal of Near Easter Studies, 36(3),161-179. Recuperado em 25 de janeiro de 2021, de http://www.jstor.org/stable/545152.

Dunand, F., & Zivie-Coche, C. (2006). Hommes et dieux en Égypte. Paris : Ed. Cybèle.

Erman, A. (1937). La réligion des égyptiens. Paris: Payot.

Griffiths, J. G. (1966). The origins of Osíris (Munchner ägyptologische studien 9). Berlin: Verlag Bruno Hesslig.

Hornung, E. (2007). Les textes de l'au-delà dans l'egypte ancienne. Monaco: Editions du Rocher.

Jacq, C. (1986). Le voyage dans l'autre monde selon l'Égypte ancienne. Monaco: Editions du Rocher.

Morenz, S. (1962). La réligion égyptienne. Paris: Payot.

Quirke, S. (1992). Ancient egyptian religion. London: British Museum Press.

Schneider, H. (1977). Shabtis: an introduction to the history of ancient egyptian funerary statuettes with a catalogue of the collection of shabtis in the National Museum of Antiquities at Leiden. Leiden: Rijksmuseum van Oudheden.

Spencer, J. (1991). Death in ancient Egypt. London: Penguim Books.

Speelers, L. (1923). Les figurines funéraires égyptiennes. Bruxelles : Les Editions Robert Sand.

Taylor, J. (2001). Death & the afterlife in ancient Egypt. London: British Museum Press.

Wiedemann, A. (1901). The realms of the egyptian dead: according to the belief of the ancient Egyptian. London: David Nut.

Willems, H. (2008). Les textes des sarcophages et la démocratie: élements d'une histoire culturelle du Moyen Empire. Paris: Ed. Cybèle.

Zabkar, L. (1968). A study of the Ba concept in ancient Egyptian texts (Studies in ancient oriental civilization n. 34). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Published

2021-04-08

How to Cite

Alfieri Gama-Rolland, C. (2021). Panorama of funerary religion in ancient Egypt: The double post mortem of ancient Egyptians. Self - Revista Do Instituto Junguiano De São Paulo, 6(1), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.21901/2448-3060/self-2021.vol06.0003

Issue

Section

Original research article