Hieroglyphs and the afterlife in ancient Egypt

Dublin Core

Title

Hieroglyphs and the afterlife in ancient Egypt

Description

"In ancient Egypt the strategy to achieve life after death relied on hieroglyphs, which united art and writing to help fulfil this ambition. This lavishly illustrated book tells the history of the texts that, through 3,000 years, were designed to ensure survival after death." "Egyptologist Stephen Quirke sets out the history of the texts designed to guarantee life beyond death, from the Pyramid Texts for kings and queens, c.2400 BC, to the Book of the Dead used by king and subject alike after 1600 BC. The literature that flourished for millennia met its end under the combined pressures of Greek-speaking government, Roman occupation, and conversion to Christianity." "Although Books of the Dead and other funerary manuscripts form the great bulk of surviving Pharaonic texts, no up-to-date survey of this material has been available to a general or scholarly readership. This book, based on a concept by Werner Forman, aims to fill that gap."--Jacket.

Creator

Werner Forman and Stephen Quirke

Table Of Contents

1. Hieroglyphic Script and Art -- 2. Pyramids, Mute and Voiced -- 3. Human Made Divine: The Coffin Texts -- 4. Surviving Death in an Age of Empire -- 5. Revivals of the Past in the First Millennium BC -- 6. The Last Flowering: Preserving Afterlife in Roman Egypt -- Map of Ancient Egypt.

Text Item Type Metadata

Original Format

Book

Files

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Tags

Citation

Werner Forman and Stephen Quirke, “Hieroglyphs and the afterlife in ancient Egypt,” Humanities Hub, accessed September 20, 2024, https://humanitieshub.sdsu.edu/omeka/items/show/1799.