
Living with the Dead: Ancestor Worship and Mortuary Ritual in Ancient Egypt: 6
Author(s): Nicola Harrington (Author)
- Publisher: Oxbow Books
- Publication Date: 31 Dec. 2012
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 208 pages
- ISBN-10: 1842174932
- ISBN-13: 9781842174937
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
A highlight of this nifty little book is its guide to identifying the deceased in a scene on an Ancient Egyptian tomb wall (pointers include their being shown as larger than other people, and the epithet maa-kheru, ‘true of voice’.). Harrington’s neat dissection of Egyptian words for aspects of the soul, and funerary magic, is also handy. Attitudes towards the dead were not always so reverent, however, as a chapter on ancient tomb desecration reveals. Likewise, the dead themselves were not always benign – those who died violently or abroad, and thus lacked proper funerary rites, became mwt: malevolent dead, blamed for miscarriages, disease, and crop failure. Crammed with interesting details, this is a great read.– “, Issue 60”
4.0 out of 5 stars An absorbing exploration of the relationships between ancient Egyptians and their dead, 30 Sep 2014
This review is from: Living with the Dead (Studies in Funerary Archaeolog) (Paperback)
Nicola Harrington here gives an overview of the evidence for the religious practices and beliefs regarding death and the dead, focusing on the period from the Old to the New Kingdoms, using textual, iconographical and archaeological sources to analyse the interaction between the living and the dead.
Beginning with the essential characteristics of the dead as distinct from the living, Harrington then investigates the mortuary cult and veneration of ancestors, with the associated rituals, statues, ancestor busts and stelae, before discussing when and where such interactions with the dead took place, and attitudes to the dead (including the impacts of tomb robbery, desecration, tomb reuse and the death and burial of children), backed up with many black-and-white and colour illustrations and a comprehensive bibliography.
She concludes that the relationship between the living and the dead in New Kingdom Egypt was a complex one based on reciprocity, but where fear and a need to appease the malevolent dead may also have played an important role.
The act of preparing for burial and arranging a mortuary cult may have been sufficient to secure a place in the afterlife.
— “, Volume 14 No. 3, December”
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