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Ka (Egyptian religion) --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Egypt --- Religion --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Egypt - Religion
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Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Incantations, Egyptian --- Future life --- Incantations, Egyptian. --- Exhibitions --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Future life - Egypt
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Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Dead --- Egypt --- Religious aspects --- Antiquities --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Dead - Religious aspects --- Egypt - Antiquities
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Dans l'Égypte pharaonique, les vivants entretenaient des relations avec les défunts de leur communauté domestique, notamment à l'occasion de fêtes et de célébrations rituelles spécifiques. Dans ce cadre, le mode de communication privilégié avec l'ancêtre était celui de la parole, du discours oral. L'écriture était toutefois aussi occasionnellement utilisée comme médium de communication. C'est ce qu'atteste en particulier le corpus des "lettres aux morts" - requêtes formulées sous format épistolaire et tracées en écriture cursive ("hiératique") sur divers supports (vaisselle en terre cuite et papyrus essentiellement) -, attesté de la fin du Ille millénaire au Ier millénaire avant notre ère. A travers l'étude de ce dossier, révélateur des mécanismes relationnels reliant les survivants à leurs morts. cet ouvrage propose une enquête sur un usage de l'écrit dans la procédure rituelle de l'Egypte ancienne. L'importance de l'écrit dans le domaine religieux pharaonique est bien connu. niais c'est sur l'écriture monumentale hiéroglyphique, dont la "fonction de sacralisation" a particulièrement été bien mise en évidence par Pascal Vernus, que l'essentiel de la réflexion a jusqu'ici porté. Ce livre cherche donc à engager une réflexion sur l'utilisation rituelle d'une technique d'écriture d'abord réservée à une pratique quotidienne (le l'écrit (documents administratifs, lettres. archivage...), et aborde la question de l'efficacité de la parole écrite par rapport à la parole énoncée en contexte rituel, ainsi que la question de l'efficacité du texte tracé en écriture cursive par rapport au texte hiéroglyphique en contexte votif.
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Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Drinking vessels --- Egypt --- Antiquities --- Drinking horns --- Mazers (Drinking bowls) --- Quaichs --- Beverage containers --- Antiquities. --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Drinking vessels - Egypt --- Egypt - Antiquities
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Founded in 1974 as the Ancient History Teaching Collection (AHTC), the Museum of Ancient Cultures (MAC) is the archaeological museum of Macquarie University. The MAC main collection comprises c. 4700 genuine artefacts from Ancient Egypt, Greece, Cyprus, Rome, the Near East and the Indus Valley. The Egyptian collection is widely regarded as one of the most important in Australia. This is the first catalogue of the collection detailing 72 Ancient Egyptian artefacts associated with funerary customs, from the Predynastic to the Coptic period. Divided into two parts, the catalogue aims to explore Ancient Egyptian funerary culture through an illustration of the MAC collection. Part One provides a series of articles on aspects of Ancient Egyptian funerary beliefs and practices. Part Two comprises the catalogue of artefacts, divided into four sections: pottery, funerary equipment, funerary texts, and religion and magic. In addition to high resolution photographs, each object receives detailed discussion of its composition and its significance to the study of Ancient Egypt more broadly. This catalogue will be an indispensable aid to students, researchers, and the general public interested in Ancient Egypt.
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Pharaohs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Pharaohs. --- -Ceremonies --- Cult --- Cultus --- Ecclesiastical rites and ceremonies --- Religious ceremonies --- Religious rites --- Rites of passage --- Traditions --- Ritualism --- Manners and customs --- Mysteries, Religious --- Ritual --- -Pharaohs --- Rites and ceremonies - Egypt
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Art, Egyptian --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Exhibitions --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Burial --- Cremation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Egypt --- Antiquities --- Cryomation --- Art, Egyptian - Catalogs --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt - Catalogs
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This is the first treatment of Pyramid Texts dealing with the protection of the deceased by the goddess Nut and his safe journey to the afterlife. The use of these texts is considered in connection with the rituals performed during the hour-vigil in the night previous to the burial, and explores the transmission of the texts from the Old Kingdom to the Greco-Roman times, taking into account the latest examples in the ptolemaic temples of Dendera, Edfu, and Philae. 0In order to achieve the most complete assessment, this study develops an innovative interdisciplinary framework drawing not only on traditional methods of textual criticism and stemmatics, but also on analytical notions on context, meaning, and uses from the New Philology.
Nut (Egyptian deity) --- Egyptian literature --- History and criticism --- Egypt --- History --- Inscriptions, Egyptian --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Nut --- Pyramid texts --- Language, style --- Religion --- Funeral rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Nut - (Egyptian deity) --- Egypt - Religion
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Inscriptions, Egyptian --- Rites and ceremonies --- Temples --- Demotic inscriptions --- Egyptian inscriptions --- Egyptian language --- Hieratic inscriptions --- Hieroglyphic inscriptions (Egyptian) --- Inscriptions, Demotic --- Inscriptions, Hieratic --- Inscriptions, Hieroglyphic (Egyptian) --- Inscriptions, Egyptian - Egypt --- Rites and ceremonies - Egypt --- Temples - Egypt
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