The Mummy: A Handbook of Egyptian Funerary Archaeology - Revised and Enlarged Edition -Cosimo, Inc., 2011 M03 1 - 578 pages The Mummy, A Handbook of Egyptian Funerary Archaeology is linguist and Orientalist E.A. Wallis Budge's detailed overview of Egyptian funeral practices and beliefs. Included is a history of Egypt, as well as the translation of common hieroglyphs, to augment readers' understanding of Egyptian culture. He describes in detail the wrapping and burying of mummies, the attendants to the tombs and the dead, drawings and hieroglyphs found on tomb walls, coffins and sarcophagi, treasures buried with the dead, and scarabs, among other things. This book is a beautiful complement to The Book of the Dead, which describes the Egyptian afterlife and the motivations for detailed and drawn-out burials. This edition is the revised and enlarged edition, originally published in 1925. SIR ERNEST ALFRED THOMPSON WALLIS BUDGE (1857-1934) was born in Bodmin, Cornwall in the UK and discovered an interest in languages at a very early age. Budge spent all his free time learning and discovering Semitic languages, including Assyrian, Syriac, and Hebrew. Eventually, through a close contact, he was able to acquire a job working with Egyptian and Iraqi artifacts at the British Museum. Budge excavated and deciphered numerous cuneiform and hieroglyphic documents, contributing vastly to the museum's collection. Eventually, he became the Keeper of his department, specializing in Egyptology. Budge wrote many books during his lifetime, most specializing in Egyptian life, religion, and language. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 87
Page ix
... seems probable that the be- ginnings of dynastic civilization are to be placed somewhere in the fourth millennium before Christ ; when the Neolithic Period began and ended is unknown . No exact dating is possible before the seventh ...
... seems probable that the be- ginnings of dynastic civilization are to be placed somewhere in the fourth millennium before Christ ; when the Neolithic Period began and ended is unknown . No exact dating is possible before the seventh ...
Page x
... seem never to have read the facts summarized by Dean Peacock , and therefore repeat the mistake made by their predecessors ... seems to me that , in order to discuss these subjects satisfactorily , a writer on them must posses not only a ...
... seem never to have read the facts summarized by Dean Peacock , and therefore repeat the mistake made by their predecessors ... seems to me that , in order to discuss these subjects satisfactorily , a writer on them must posses not only a ...
Page 9
... seem , more often than not , to have been foreigners . The inhabitants of the Nile Valley , from Uganda to the Mediterranean Sea , were from time immemorial a very mixed people , even as they are to - day , and for the greater number of ...
... seem , more often than not , to have been foreigners . The inhabitants of the Nile Valley , from Uganda to the Mediterranean Sea , were from time immemorial a very mixed people , even as they are to - day , and for the greater number of ...
Page 11
... seems that these invaders first made their way into Upper Egypt , and that having settled themselves there they invaded other parts of the country , both in the south and in the north , and that wherever they went they imposed their ...
... seems that these invaders first made their way into Upper Egypt , and that having settled themselves there they invaded other parts of the country , both in the south and in the north , and that wherever they went they imposed their ...
Page 22
... seems to have been Narmer , ( to call him by his " Horus name " 2 ) , who adopted , as " King of the South and North , " W , 1 is usually said to represent a bee , but some entomologists think that the insect here drawn is a hornet or ...
... seems to have been Narmer , ( to call him by his " Horus name " 2 ) , who adopted , as " King of the South and North , " W , 1 is usually said to represent a bee , but some entomologists think that the insect here drawn is a hornet or ...
Contents
12 | |
83 | |
Ḥāpi | 104 |
A LIST OF THE COMMONEST HIEROGLYPHS | 178 |
A LIST OF THE COMMONEST DETERMINATIVES | 194 |
THE MUMMY METHODS OF MUMMIFYING ETC | 203 |
MUMMY LABELS | 214 |
THE CARTONNAGE MUMMYCASE | 221 |
The Two Gods | 327 |
AN EGYPTIAN FUNERAL IN THE DYNASTIC PERIOD | 336 |
mm | 342 |
THE CEREMONY OF THE FOUR BLAZING FLAMES | 351 |
Ast Isis | 362 |
Khensupakharṭ | 365 |
Sekhmit | 371 |
The Ostrich | 388 |
ANOINTING TABLETS And the SEVEN HOLY OILS | 239 |
CHESTS FOR CANOPIC JARS | 245 |
SHAUABTIU OR USHABTIU FIGURES | 251 |
BEADS AND NECKLACES RINGS BRACELETS Armlets ETC | 266 |
THE SCARAB AND THE SCARABAEUS SACER | 280 |
The Vulture of | 312 |
The | 318 |
and Tefnut | 324 |
VESSELS IN Earthenware Stone Glass ETC | 389 |
THE EGYPTIAN SARCOPHAGUS | 420 |
THE HETEP Or Tablet for Sepulchral Offerings | 432 |
FOUNDATION DEPOSITS | 450 |
The Ibis | 454 |
MODELS OF OBJECTS USED AT THE OPEning of the MOUTH | 461 |
DRAUGHTS AND DRAUGHTBOARDS | 474 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abydos alabaster Åmen Amenḥetep amulet ancient Ani's Anubis bandages beetle body Book British Museum bronze Brugsch built buried Cairo called cartouche chamber Champollion Chapter characters coffin colour contains Copt Coptic dead deceased demotic disk Egypt Egyptian Égyptiens embalming example faïence feet figures funerary Gîzah glazed Gnostic goddess gods gold granite Greek Hathor head heart hieratic hieroglyphic Horus Hyksos inches inscribed inscription Isis IVth jars king Kingdom Lepsius linen London Manetho maṣṭabah Memphis monuments mummy Nephthys Nile Nubia obelisk offerings Osiris painted Papyrus Paris Pepi period placed prenomen priests probably Ptaḥ Ptolemy pyramid Pyramid Texts Rameses Rameses II Recension rectangular reign represented Rosetta Stone sarcophagus says scarabs scribe sepulchral Seti side soul stele Sûdân temple Theban Thebes thee Thothmes tomb translation uraeus Usertsen Utchat vases Vignettes VIth wooden words XIIth XIXth XVIIIth dynasty XXVIth δὲ καὶ حة