Replica Judgment day Tablet contains sculptures of The ANUBIS (God of the Dead),AMMIT & THOTH.

$184

Handmade replica Judgment day Tablet of doctor Anubis and god Thoth and AMMIT, Replica handmade Tablet

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Item description:
This is a tablet contains sculptures of Anibus (God of the dead) Judgment day, it’s the exact replica of the real one.
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History:
In Ancient Egypt, it was believed that upon death, one’s fate in the afterlife was determined by the weighing of one’s heart. One’s heart was kept within the body during mummification so that it can travel with the deceased into the afterlife. Upon death, one entered the underworld (Duat), where Anubis, the God of the dead, weighed the person’s heart on a scale against the feather of Ma’at, the goddess of order, truth, and righteousness. If the heart weighed more than the feather, meaning that the person was more wicked than good, then the heart would be devoured by Ammit, a demon with the head of a crocodile, the front half of the body of a leopard, and the back half of a hippopotamus, but with goat arms. If a person’s heart was devoured by Ammit, then he would die a second death and be completely annihilated from existence.

This scene is remarkable not only for its vividness but as one of the few parts of the Book of the Dead with any explicit moral content. The judgment of the dead and the Negative Confession were a representation of the conventional moral code which governed Egyptian society. For every “I have not…” in the Negative Confession, it is possible to read an unexpressed “Thou shalt not”. While the Ten Commandments of Jewish and Christian ethics are rules of conduct laid down by a perceived divine revelation, the Negative Confession is more divine enforcement of everyday morality. Views differ among Egyptologists about how far the Negative Confession represents a moral absolute, with ethical purity being necessary for progress to the Afterlife. John Taylor points out the wording of Spells 30B and 125 suggests a pragmatic approach to morality; by preventing the heart from contradicting him with any inconvenient truths, it seems that the deceased could enter the afterlife even if their life had not been entirely pure. Ogden Goelet says “without an exemplary and moral existence, there was no hope for a successful afterlife”, while Geraldine Pinch suggests that the Negative Confession is essentially similar to the spells protecting from demons and that the success of the Weighing of the Heart depended on the mystical knowledge of the true names of the judges rather than on the deceased’s moral behavior.X

Material:

Basalt Stone, Basalt

Availability: 1 in stock