I cant answer it
I cant answer it
In Egypt carved into the walls of tombs, pyramids and on obelisks and statues.
So the dead could have those things in the after life.
The paintings in tombs were either one of these things: * Show what the deseased liked to do * Protect the deseased with spells * Protect the deseased with the Gods watching them
The Egyptian Religion revolved around preparation for the after life, part of that was sending along the things the deceased would need, in the case of the wealthy, like a Pharaoh, the things were given physically, in the case of the less well off, symbolically. That's a huge oversimplification, of course, but a true understanding of a culture that complex is the work of years, if not a lifetime.
I cant answer it
In Egypt carved into the walls of tombs, pyramids and on obelisks and statues.
he would be sad incorect
Pyramids are tombs. The egyptians wanted the pharaoh to have a good after life. That's why the four walls point to the sky.
The walls of the pharaoh's tomb are very important in two ways. These ways being that the walls are able to be tested to see how old they are and they have writings explaining Egyptian ways of life.
hieroglyphics
So the dead could have those things in the after life.
The paintings in tombs were either one of these things: * Show what the deseased liked to do * Protect the deseased with spells * Protect the deseased with the Gods watching them
carved it into walls?
carved it into walls?
The Egyptian Religion revolved around preparation for the after life, part of that was sending along the things the deceased would need, in the case of the wealthy, like a Pharaoh, the things were given physically, in the case of the less well off, symbolically. That's a huge oversimplification, of course, but a true understanding of a culture that complex is the work of years, if not a lifetime.
Hieroglyphics are a writing system, not something that is "built." They were carved into walls of buildings among other things, and some walls took up to a year or more to inscribe.