Representations of calves in some vignettes from the Book of the Dead. | ||||
حولية الاتحاد العام للآثاريين العرب "دراسات فى آثار الوطن العربى" | ||||
Article 138, Volume 15, Issue 15, 2012, Page 23-23 PDF (188.13 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/cguaa.2012.36850 | ||||
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Author | ||||
DINA EZZ EL DEEN | ||||
کلية السياحة و الفنادق-جامعة الاسکندرية | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Representations of calves in some vignettes from the Book of the Dead. The Ancient Egyptians showed special care and interest towards calves. They understood their importance in the Egyptian agrarian-based society in which the future of the herds depended largely on these young animals. From the religious point of view, calves had their symbolic significance. Some funerary texts refer to a religious aspect that was given to the calf. In the Book of the Dead in particular, the calf appears in the vignettes of two Chapters. That of Chapter (1) is mainly concerned with the funerary procession and the ceremony of the Opening of the Mouth. Part of the vignette shows the cutting of a calf's foreleg. The other Chapter (109) is entitled: Spell for knowing the Souls of the Easterners. Its scene was depicted on papyri as well as on tomb walls. The research aims at shedding light upon these representations in order to interpret their funerary and religious significance. | ||||
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