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An Epitome of the Ancient Egyptian Religion An Epitome of the Ancient Egyptian Religion
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Resistance to Decryption Resistance to Decryption
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The Milieu of the Book of the Dead: Authors, Copyists, Customers The Milieu of the Book of the Dead: Authors, Copyists, Customers
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Prospects: How Fruitful Can a Study of the Book of the Dead Be? Prospects: How Fruitful Can a Study of the Book of the Dead Be?
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Bibliography Bibliography
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13 The Book of the Dead as a Source for the Study of Ancient Egyptian ReligionMethodology, Problems, Prospects
Get accessMartin Andreas Stadler, Professor of Egyptology, Julius Maximilian University Würzburg
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Published:20 June 2023
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Abstract
Egyptology uses the Book of the Dead for its research chiefly along four lines: (a) textual criticism to reconstruct a hypothetical archetype, (b) the edition of entire scrolls of the Book of the Dead, sometimes including full translations, but quite often without, (c) in-depth-studies of individual spells or phenomena that appear in a series of spells, and finally (d) as a mine of information for various ideas, concepts, and beliefs in ancient Egyptian religion. Starting with a critical review of these approaches, the chapter endeavors to outline how Egyptologists can fruitfully use the Book of the Dead for the study of Egyptian religion in general. It will also determine the limits of such an approach. By briefly studying the audience of the Book of the Dead—those who wrote, read, and used the Book of the Dead or rather its contents—we can gain insights into the position of the Book of the Dead within the corpus of ancient Egyptian religious texts in general.
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