Egyptian mythology is the collection of myths from ancient Egypt, which describe the actions of the Egyptian gods as a means of understanding the world around them.
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Egyptian mythology is the collection of myths from ancient Egypt, which describe the actions of the Egyptian gods as a means of understanding the world around them.
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Egyptian mythology myths are primarily metaphorical, translating the essence and behavior of deities into terms that humans can understand.
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Egyptian mythology deities represent natural phenomena, from physical objects like the earth or the sun to abstract forces like knowledge and creativity.
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However, in the 1940s, Henri Frankfort, realizing the symbolic nature of Egyptian mythology, argued that apparently contradictory ideas are part of the "multiplicity of approaches" that the Egyptians used to understand the divine realm.
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The varying symbols of Egyptian mythology express ideas too complex to be seen through a single lens.
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The conventions of Egyptian mythology art were poorly suited for portraying whole narratives, so most myth-related artwork consists of sparse individual scenes.
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Egyptian mythology word written m3?t, often rendered maat or ma'at, refers to the fundamental order of the universe in Egyptian mythology belief.
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Egyptian mythology has beer dyed red to resemble blood and spreads it over the field.
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Egyptian mythology accounts give sequences of divine rulers who take the place of the sun god as king on earth, each reigning for many thousands of years.
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Egyptian mythology's is assisted by funerary deities such as Nephthys and Anubis, and the process of Osiris' restoration reflects Egyptian traditions of embalming and burial.
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Egyptian mythology is succeeded first by gods and then by spirits that represent dim memories of Egypt's Predynastic rulers, the souls of Nekhen and Pe.
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Egyptian mythology reaches the peak of his strength at noon and then ages and weakens as he moves toward sunset.
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Indeed, although Egyptian mythology texts avoid saying it explicitly, Ra's entry into the Duat is seen as his death.
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The purpose of Egyptian mythology religion was the maintenance of maat, and the concepts that myths express were believed to be essential to maat.
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The rituals of Egyptian mythology religion were meant to make the mythic events, and the concepts they represented, real once more, thereby renewing maat.
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Much of Egyptian mythology ritual was focused on more basic activities like giving offerings to the gods, with mythic themes serving as ideological background rather than as the focus of a rite.
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Mythological scenes in Egyptian mythology artwork are rarely placed in sequence as a narrative, but individual scenes, particularly depicting the resurrection of Osiris, do sometimes appear in religious artwork.
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Symbols in Egyptian mythology tradition were frequently reinterpreted, so that the meanings of mythical symbols could change and multiply over time like the myths themselves.
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