51 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
51 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
<!-- factbase:9f0b6a -->
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# Ancient Egyptian Religion
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## Overview
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Ancient Egyptian religion was a complex polytheistic system practiced for over 3,000 years, centered on maintaining *ma'at* (cosmic order) through ritual, temple worship, and funerary practices. Approximately 1,500 deities are attested across the full span of Egyptian history [^3].
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## Key Facts
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- Period: ~3100 BCE – ~400 CE (suppressed under Christianity) @t[~3100 BCE..~400 CE]
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- Type: Polytheistic with henotheistic tendencies
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- Sacred texts: Pyramid Texts (~2400–2300 BCE), Coffin Texts (~2100–1650 BCE), Book of the Dead (~1550 BCE onward) [^4]
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- Priesthood: Temple-based, pharaoh as chief intermediary with the gods
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## Major Deities
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- Ra/Amun-Ra: Sun god, king of the gods; center of solar theology at Heliopolis
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- Osiris: God of the dead and resurrection
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- Isis: Goddess of magic and motherhood
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- Horus: Sky god, divine kingship
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- Anubis: God of mummification
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- Thoth: God of writing and wisdom
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- Ptah: God of craftsmen and creation; patron deity of Memphis [^3]
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- Set: God of chaos, storms, and the desert; adversary of Horus [^1]
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## Key Concepts
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- *Ma'at*: Cosmic order, truth, and justice
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- *Ka* and *Ba*: Aspects of the soul
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- *Heka*: Divine magic; the animating force underlying all ritual and divine power [^3]
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- Afterlife: Judgment by Osiris, weighing of the heart against the feather of Ma'at
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- Mummification: Preservation of the body for the afterlife
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## Theological Systems
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Egyptian theology was not monolithic; competing creation traditions developed around major cult centers [^5]:
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- **Heliopolitan Ennead**: Nine primordial deities centered on Atum/Ra at Heliopolis — Atum, Shu, Tefnut, Geb, Nut, Osiris, Isis, Set, and Nephthys
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- **Hermopolitan Ogdoad**: Eight deities representing primordial chaos at Hermopolis — four pairs embodying water (Nun/Naunet), infinity (Heh/Hauhet), darkness (Kek/Kauket), and hidden forces (Amun/Amaunet)
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- **Memphite Theology**: Ptah as creator-god who brought the world into being through thought and speech (*Shabaka Stone*, ~700 BCE, copying an older text)
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## Major Cult Centers
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- **Heliopolis** (near modern Cairo): Center of solar worship; temple of Ra/Atum; origin of the Ennead tradition
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- **Memphis**: Cult center of Ptah; political and religious capital of the Old Kingdom
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- **Thebes** (modern Luxor): Center of Amun worship; site of Karnak and Luxor temples; dominant from the Middle Kingdom onward
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- **Abydos**: Principal cult center of Osiris; major pilgrimage site and royal necropolis
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## Atenism
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Pharaoh Akhenaten (~1353–1336 BCE) briefly imposed monotheistic worship of the Aten (sun disk), suppressing other cults. Reversed after his death [^2]. @t[~1353 BCE..~1336 BCE]
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---
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[^1]: Wilkinson, R. *The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt* (Thames & Hudson, 2003)
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[^2]: Assmann, J. *The Search for God in Ancient Egypt* (Cornell University Press, 2001)
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[^3]: Hornung, E. *Conceptions of God in Ancient Egypt: The One and the Many* (Cornell University Press, 1982)
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[^4]: Faulkner, R.O. *The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts* (Oxford University Press, 1969); Allen, J.P. *The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts* (Society of Biblical Literature, 2005)
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[^5]: Allen, J.P. *Genesis in Egypt: The Philosophy of Ancient Egyptian Creation Accounts* (Yale Egyptological Studies, 1988) |