becuz
There treated with great respect, there much much higher up in social society.
Theree are some mummies in the Valley of the Kings/ Queens and others are in some of Egypt's museums.
there viewpoint on that was because they jujujujuju
They did not decorate the mummie itself, but the coffin.
like kings
They were turned into mummies to preserve the bodies.
I believe only kings and officials were preserved as mummies because they had a higher ranking than the peasants and the priests and scribes. they deserved to be mummified
In ancient Egypt the kings mummies were put in special tombs.
There treated with great respect, there much much higher up in social society.
Theree are some mummies in the Valley of the Kings/ Queens and others are in some of Egypt's museums.
there viewpoint on that was because they jujujujuju
Mummies weren't really used for anything but the Egyptians believed that pharaohs and kings should be treated well and go into the afterlife. Egyptians would preserve the body which was called mummification for 70 days long. Later in Egtptian life thieves were open to wealthy possesions so they stopped preserving bodies.
They did not decorate the mummie itself, but the coffin.
Yes, they mummiefied their pharaohs(gods,kings,priests,etc.)
Eric Kudalis has written: 'The Royal Mummies' -- subject(s): Mummies, Juvenile literature, Kings, queens, rulers 'Stories of mummies and the living dead' -- subject(s): Mummies, Fiction 'Frankenstein and other stories of man-made monsters' -- subject(s): Monsters, Fiction 'Ice Mummies'
Mummies, Pharoes, basically the kings and queens of ancient Egypt
According to Bossuet, kings should be treated with great reverence and respect, as they are considered divinely appointed representatives of God on Earth. He believed that the authority of kings is absolute and that they are responsible for maintaining order and justice within their realms. Consequently, subjects owe loyalty and obedience to their rulers, as this aligns with the divine order. However, this view also implies that kings have a moral obligation to govern wisely and justly for the good of their people.