say this is a Pharaoh on his side: -- this is an Anubis ------------- they are those giant dogs that protect the tomb. hope i helped!
gold
There are many statues of Anubis as Anubis was widely worshiped throughout Egypt and elsewhere.
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It depends upon which statue of Anubis to which the question refers, throughout the history of ancient Egypt many had been made.
Under the statue of Anubis
from the second transport tile go over to your left once and it will be infront of the jackal statue
the god of embalming was Anubis. That's why he was always there, like his statue was the when they were carrying the mummified pharaoh to his tomb.
Anubis appears as a man with the head of a jackal-like animal. Unlike a real jackal, Anubis' head is black, representing his position as a god of the dead. He is rarely shown fully-human, but he is depicted so in the Temple of Abydos of Rameses II. There is a beautiful statue of him as a full jackal in the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Anubis appeared as a man with the head of a jackal-like animal. Unlike a real jackal, Anubis' head is black, representing his position as a god of the dead. He is rarely shown fully-human, but he is depicted so in the Temple of Abydos of Rameses II. There is a beautiful statue of him as a full jackal in the tomb of Tutankhamun.
In Anubis in art; he is a man with the head of a jackal-like animal. Unlike a real jackal, Anubis' head is black, representing his position as a god of the dead. He is rarely shown fully-human, but he is depicted so in the Temple of Abydos of Rameses II. There is a beautiful statue of him as a full jackal in the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Anubis looked like a man with the head of a jackal-like animal. Unlike a real jackal, Anubis' head is black, representing his position as a god of the dead. He is rarely shown fully-human, but he is depicted so in the Temple of Abydos of Rameses II. There is a beautiful statue of him as a full jackal in the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Anubis was a ancient Egpytian god, not a "pharaoh" or "king" of ancient Egpyt. Anubis was most often depicted as a man with the head of a jackal-like animal. Unlike a real jackal, Anubis' head is black, representing his position as a god of the dead. He is rarely shown fully-human, but he is depicted so in the Temple of Abydos of Rameses II. There is a beautiful statue of him as a full jackal in the tomb of Tutankhamun.