During the ancient Egyptian mummification process, the heart was typically left in the body because it was considered the seat of intelligence and emotion, playing a crucial role in the afterlife judgment. Other organs, like the lungs, stomach, intestines, and liver, were removed, embalmed, and stored in canopic jars. The heart was essential for the "Weighing of the Heart" ceremony, where it was weighed against the feather of Ma'at to determine the deceased's worthiness for the afterlife. This belief underscored the heart's importance in the spiritual journey after death.
Skin is the largest organ of your body. Next is Liver.
Your skin is the largest organ outside of your body :)
The skin is an organ, and it is the organ that covers and protects the body.
The body itself is not an organ; rather, it is composed of a collection of organs, tissues, and systems that work together to facilitate movement. Muscles, bones, and joints are key components that enable the body to move.
The largest organ is the skin. The largest internal organ is the liver.
Nothing, only the heart was left in the body.
The heart.
It did not really have a name. It was the mummification process.
The organ that is not removed from the body is the heart so that they can weigh it to see if you go to the underworld or not.
The Ancient Egyptian left the heart in the body.
Largely the skin but also the lungs and the kidneys.
Herbs were put into the body after the major organs were removed. The mummification was to preserve the body for the life the person would have in the afterlife.
Large intestine
mummification
No we not use mummification these days, because in ancient Egyptian they were not careful with the body's. Now they started to put body's coffins.
Ancient egyptians believed it was to be weighed in the afterlife.
the effect is to preserve the body for millions of years