Referat Egyptian Civilization
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat Egyptian Civilization si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat Egyptian civilizationCiteste fragmente din Referat Egyptian Civilization
According to the Egyptian account of creation, only the ocean existed at
first. Then Ra, the sun, came out of an egg (a flower, in some versions)
that appeared on the surface of the water. Ra brought forth four
children, the gods Shu and Geb and the goddesses Tefnut and Nut. Shu and
Tefnut became the atmosphere. They stood on Geb, who became the earth,
and raised up Nut, who became the sky. Ra ruled over all. Geb and Nut
later had two sons, Set and Osiris, and two daughters, Isis and
Nephthys. Osiris succeeded Ra as king of the earth, helped by Isis, his
sister-wife. Set, however, hated his brother and killed him. Isis then
embalmed her husband s body with the help of the god Anubis, who thus
became the god of embalming. The powerful charms of Isis resurrected
Osiris, who became king of the netherworld, the land of the dead. Horus,
who was the son of Osiris and Isis, later defeated Set in a great battle
and became king of the earth.
Local Gods
From this myth of creation came the conception of the ennead, a group of
nine divinities, and the triad, consisting of a divine father, mother,
and son. Every local temple in Egypt possessed its own ennead and triad.
The greatest ennead, however, was that of Ra and his children and
grandchildren. This group was worshiped at Heliopolis, the center of sun
worship. The origin of the local deities is obscure; some of them were
taken over from foreign religions, and some were originally the animal
gods of prehistoric Africa. Gradually, they were all fused into a
complicated religious structure, although comparatively few local
divinities became important throughout Egypt. In addition to those
already named, the important divinities included the gods Amon, Thoth,
Ptah, Khnemu, and Hapi, and the goddesses Hathor, Mut, Neit, and Sekhet.
Their importance increased with the political ascendancy of the
localities where they were worshiped. For example, the ennead of Memphis
was headed by a triad composed of the father Ptah, the mother Sekhet,
and the son Imhotep. Therefore, during the Memphite dynasties, Ptah
became one of the greatest gods in Egypt. Similarly, when the Theban
dynasties ruled Egypt, the ennead of Thebes was given the most
importance, headed by the father Amon, the mother Mut, and the son
Khonsu. As the religion became more involved, true deities were
sometimes confused with human beings who had been glorified after death.
Thus, Imhotep, who was originally the chief minister of the 3rd Dynasty
ruler Zoser, was later regarded as a demigod. During the 5th Dynasty the
pharaohs began to claim divine ancestry and from that time on were
worshiped as sons of Ra. Minor gods, some merely demons, were also given
places in local divine hierarchies.
Iconography
The Egyptian gods were represented with human torsos and human or animal
heads. Sometimes the animal or bird expressed the characteristics of the
god. Ra, for example, had the head of a hawk, and the hawk was sacred to
him because of its swift flight across the sky; Hathor, the goddess of
love and laughter,was given the head of a cow, which was sacred to her;
Anubis was given the head of a jackal because these animals ravaged the
desert graves in ancient times; Mut was vulture headed and Thoth was
ibis headed; and Ptah was given a human head, although he was
occasionally represented as a bull, called Apis. Because of the gods to
which they were attached, the sacred animals were venerated, but they
were never worshiped until the decadent 26th Dynasty. The gods were also
represented by symbols, such as the sun disk and hawk wings that were
worn on the headdress of the pharaoh.
Sun Worship
The only important god who was worshiped with consistency was Ra, chief
of cosmic deities, from whom early Egyptian kings claimed descent.
Beginning with the Middle Kingdom (2134-1668 BC), Ra worship acquired
the status of a state religion, and the god was gradually fused with
Amon during the Theban dynasties, becoming the supreme god Amon-Ra.
During the 18th Dynasty the pharaoh Amenhotep III renamed the sun god
Aton, an ancient term for the physical solar force. Amenhotep s son and
successor, Amenhotep IV, instituted a revolution in Egyptian religion by
proclaiming Aton the true and only god. He changed his own name to
Akhenaton, meaning “Aton is satisfied.†This first great monotheist
was so iconoclastic that he had the plural word gods deleted from
monuments, and he relentlessly persecuted the priests of Amon.
Akhenaton s sun religion failed to survive, although it exerted a great
influence on the art and thinking of his time, and Egypt returned to the
ancient, labyrinthine religion of polytheism after Akhenaton s death.
Burying the dead was of religious concern in Egypt, and Egyptian
funerary rituals and equipment eventually became the most elaborate the
world has ever known. The Egyptians believed that the vital life-force
was composed of several psychical elements, of which the most important
was the ka. The ka, a duplicate of the body, accompanied the body
throughout life and, after death, departed from the body to take its
place in the kingdom of the dead. The ka, however, could not exist
without the body; every effort had to be made, therefore, to preserve
the corpse. Bodies were embalmed and mummified according to a
traditional method supposedly begun by Isis, who mummified her husband
Osiris. In addition, wood or stone replicas of the body were put into
the tomb in the event that the mummy was destroyed. The greater the
number of statue-duplicates in his or her tomb, the more chances the
dead person had of resurrection. As a final protection, exceedingly
elaborate tombs were erected to protect the corpse and its equipment.
After leaving the tomb, the souls of the dead supposedly were beset by
innumerable dangers, and the tombs were therefore furnished with a copy
of the Book of the Dead. Part of this book, a guide to the world of the
dead, consists of charms designed to overcome these dangers. After
arriving in the kingdom of the dead, the ka was judged by Osiris, the
king of the dead, and 42 demon assistants. The Book of the Dead also
contains instructions for proper conduct before these judges. If the
judges decided the deceased had been a sinner, the ka was condemned to
hunger and thirst or to be torn to pieces by horrible executioners. If
the decision was favorable, the ka went to the heavenly realm of the
fields of Yaru, where grain grew 3.7 m (12 ft) high and existence was a
glorified version of life on earth. All the necessities for this
paradisiacal existence, from furniture to reading matter, were,
therefore, put into the tombs. As a payment for the afterlife and his
benevolent protection, Osiris required the dead to perform tasks for
him, such as working in the grain fields. Even this duty could, however,
be obviated by placing small statuettes, called ushabtis, into the tomb
to serve as substitutes for the deceased.
Dinu Andra
grade 11A
ì¥Â