The heart of a dead body was weighed on a scale. On one side of the scale there was a feather and on the opposite side, a heart. If the heart was heavier than the feather, it meant that the dead body's soul would not make it to afterlife and the person's soul and body would be vulnerable to the demons of the underworld. If the heart was lighter than the feather it meant that this person had done good deeds in his life and he would enter afterlife and live in paradise for eternity.
Hope that helped! I'm studying this at the moment! :)
The ancient Egyptians believed that, when they died, they would be judged on their behavior during their lifetime before they could be granted a place in the afterlife.
the purpose was to see if the heart is worthy enough to go to the afterlife (it's kinda like our heaven).
It determined whether you get a happy afterlife or not.
zxx
tang ina mo
He was not counted among the Forty Two Judges - or Assessors - of the dead. So, he was likely otherwise occupied with the continuous journey between 'day' and 'night'.
Hathor had a scale. He had the heart of the mummy and something like a pyramid. He put the heart and the pyramid on the scale. If the heart was lighter than the scale it ment that that specific Egyption isn't good enough to goto the afterlife so it would be sent to Anubis the god of death where he would rot away. But if the heart was about the same he would get to go to the afterlife. That is why they burry all those things with them.
A ceremony that is performed for social or religious reason help society and the culture. One important ceremony that is important to society is marriage.
Weighing of the heart is part of the Egyptian belief in the afterlife. It refers to the judgment of a deceased person's heart against the feather of Ma'at, the goddess of truth and justice. If the heart is found to be lighter than the feather, it means the person lived a virtuous life, and they are allowed to enter the realm of the afterlife. If it is heavier, it suggests a life filled with wrongdoing and the heart is devoured by a demonic creature.
call me 4433987
zxx
zxx
zxx
To see if they were a good person in there life.
The opening of the mouth ceremony, offering of food, weighing of the heart, burial ceremony
tang ina mo
Thot's role in the weighing of the heart ceromony was to record the results e.g. if the heart was lighter he would wright the name of the person and lighter in a book
Ammut, would appear and eat the heart if it was heavier than a feather. A light heart was achieved by being charitable whilst alive. Ammut is the god which is shown to have a head of a crocodile and the body of a Hippo and a lion.
The weighing of the heart had nothing to do with the deceased being asked a question; the results were out of her/his hands. If the heart was found to be heavier than a feather, the deceased was eaten by a beast and denied an afterlife.
The weighing of the heart.
the weighing of the heart ceremony was a ceremony from ancient Egypt. A soul was taken to Osiris. His heart was weighed on a scale against a feather. The feather was the feather of Maat, the goddess of truth and justice. The Egyptians believed that the heart contained all the deeds a person has done, and that the heart grows heavier with each bad deed. The heart was weighed by Anubis, a god with a jackal head who was the god of embalming. If the heart was light enough, the soul could go spend eternity in paradise with Osiris. If not, the heart would be devoured by Ammit(or Ammut). The Devourer.