Ancient Chinese never did mummification like the Ancient Egyptians.
it was just the way they were born
Mummification is from ancient Egypt. It was when you had to do all the disgusting steps to making a mummy.
All of the mountains, including Mt. Everest, helped protect the ancient Chinese people from invasion. There were very few ways to get into China and all of them were difficult.
It all started out when ancient egyptians believed in a god by the name of Anubis who was a mummification god. they worshiped him for many years until he died. but they still do mummification.
Anubis, he is the god of mummification and death for all of ancient Egypt
First of all the person would have to die. Then they were mummified and this process took about seventy days. Burial followed the mummification process.
Ancient Egyptno, most of them were very poor so their families buried their dead in sand pits in the desert.
The ancient Chinese discovery of the circulatory system contributed to their mastery of traditional medicine. These techniques are still used successfully by modern people of all nationalities.
All groups of ancient people were the foundation of our present various cultures. To get a specific answer, you would have to research the individual civilizations, such as the Jews, Greeks, Romans, Chinese, Korean, etc.
No. All-out mummification was an expensive process, which only the fairly wealthy could afford. However, many bodies underwent a kind of natural mummification simply due to the dry heat of the climate.
mummification was invented probably near the time of 12,000bc Mummification, historically, was used first by the ancient Egyptians. These people did so because of the belief that the physical is tied to the spiritual, so a decayed corpse meant bad times in the afterlife. Mummification is process that has been used by multiple cultures to preserve dead humans, and even animals, against decomposition. Archeological evidence suggests mummification dates back at least 5 millennia.
In ancient Egypt, the levels of mummification for the lower class varied. Some lower-class individuals were able to afford a basic form of mummification, which involved removing organs, drying out the body with natron, and wrapping it in linen bandages. Others may have received a less elaborate mummification process or been buried without being mummified at all.