The Ceremonial Posts of Wsir King in the Afterlife | ||||
International Journal of Heritage, Tourism and Hospitality | ||||
Article 21, Volume 12, Issue 1, March 2018, Page 315-334 PDF (977.53 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ijhth.2018.31519 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
Rasha Omran; Ayman Waziry; Norhan Salah El-Din | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The concept of nTrw has many assumptions, which had been used in the ancient Egyptian religion and literature, as gods, good spirits, evil spirits, snakes, king’s helpers, king’s enemies and other various meanings. The first conception is talking about the nTrw as Gods in positive and negative roles in general meaningwhich the word nTrw had been mentioned through in various texts, some of these texts are: n ir.tw nTrw ir nn pn , there is nothing which the Gods did against this king, (PT:1464b)[1]. This spell is considered as unhelpful appearance, because it refers to Seth and his followers “demons”, however there is another example to helpful spells appearance as: Dd mdw hA wsir nn .in n.k Gb @rw inD.f Tw in.f n.k ibw , he may save you, he brings to you the hearts of the gods.(PT:634b)[2]. The second conception is talking about the nTrw as nouns and Gods themselves, adjectives and also gathered with some of the king’s names to give the sacristy impact. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
nTrw; Pyramid Texts; Ceremonial Posts; Myth; rituals; Wsir; Afterlife | ||||
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