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The Cannibal Hymn forms a self-standing episode in the ritual anthology that makes up the Pyramid Texts, first appearing in the tomb of Unas at the end of the Fifth Dynasty. Its style and format are characteristic of the oral-recitational poetry of pharaonic Egypt, marked by allusive metaphor and the exploitation of wordplay and homophony in its verbal recreation of a butchery ritual. Christopher Eyre examines the text of the Cannibal Hymn in its performative and cultural context: the detailed mythologisation of the sacrificial process in this hymn poses key questions about the nature of rites
Animal sacrifice --- Fasts and feasts --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Future life --- Incantations, Egyptian --- Egyptian incantations --- Afterlife --- Eternal life --- Life, Future --- Life after death --- Eschatology --- Eternity --- Immortality --- Near-death experiences --- Egyptian fasts and feasts --- Sacrifice --- Egyptian religion --- Religious aspects --- Pyramid texts. --- Altaegyptische Pyramidentexte --- Inscriptions des pyramides de Saqqarah --- Egyptian pyramid texts --- Pyramidentexte --- Altägyptischen Pyramidentexte --- Book of the dead --- Coffin texts --- Incantations, Egyptian. --- Future life. --- Domestic animals --- Animal husbandry --- Barnyard animals --- Beasts --- Domesticated animals --- Farm animals --- Animals --- Zoology, Economic --- Domestication --- Feral animals --- Egyptian religion.
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"Aimed at students, instructors and general readers interested in the experiences of enslaved persons in ancient Egypt, from the Old Kingdom to the early Islamic period. Provides nearly three hundred primary sources in translation, arranged both chronologically and thematically and accompanied by contextualising introductions"--
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