Book of the Dead

ancient Egyptian funerary text
D21
Z1
M33
W24
Z1
O1
D21
X1
D54
G17O4
D21
G43N5
Z1
Book of Coming Forth by Day
in hieroglyphs

The Book of the Dead is a name for an Egyptian text. It is also known as The Book of Coming [or Going] Forth By Day, or as the papyrus of Ani. It contains a number of texts, and spells. These allow the dead person to safely get to the place of the afterlife.

The book of the dead was most commonly written on a papyrus scroll. It was placed in the coffin of the dead person, or their burial chamber. The book of the dead in its most familiar form was first used in the New Kingdom, but many of the spells had their origins in the funerary texts of the Old and Middle Kingdoms.[1]

The name "Book of the Dead" was the invention of the German Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius, who published a selection of the texts in 1842.

Missing sections of the book were found in the Queensland Museum in 2012. Historians are hoping that the missing pieces will give them a copy of the complete book.[2]

References change

  1. "Egypt: The Book of the Dead, A Feature Tour Egypt Story". www.touregypt.net.
  2. "Fragments of Book of the Dead found in Brisbane". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 21 April 2012. Retrieved 22 April 2012.