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14 Mar 2008 02:21:23 | Dr. Sherin Elkhawaga
The ancient Egyptians were very fond of animals. They had
animals that were sacred, some were pets and other were used in
farming. This article is courtesy of www.kingtutshop.com home of
handmade crafts and educational kits. Sacred Animals. Animals
were thought to be sacred to the Egyptians because they believed
that when one of their gods or goddesses came down to earth,
they would represent themselves as a specific species. The
Egyptians thought by honoring them, they would be pleasing the
god. They also thought that animals shared an afterlife with
their humans so it resulted in animals being buried within its
family tomb. The animals that were considered especially sacred:
ˇcat- The male cat had religious connections with Ra. Kittens
were specifically reared for sacrificial/worship uses . ˇcattle-
Beef was often used as a sacrificial offering to various
deities. ˇscarab beetle- The emblem of a specific goddess, the
scarab beetle was associated with the daily birth of the sun,
and credited with spontaneous generation of its young. Because
of its sacred status, it was widely represented in art. ˇJackel-
it was considered a protector of royal tombs from robbers and
helped in the afterlife journey. Cats and Kittens. One of the
most common animal mummies in Egypt was the cat. Cats were
believed to represent the goddess Bastet. Consequently, they
were raised in and around temples devoted to Bastet. When they
died, they were mummified and buried in huge cemeteries, often
in large communal graves. From about 332 B.C. to 30 B.C.,
animals began to be raised for the specific purpose of being
turned into mummies. The mummies were sold to people on their
way to worship a god and left at the temple as offerings.
Scientists have uncovered a gruesome fact: many cats died quite
premature and unnatural deaths. Two- to four-month-old kittens
seemed to have been sacrificed in huge numbers. So many cat
mummies were made that researchers can only guess that there
were millions of them.
Bastet: Cats are very useful animals in a country that depends
on grain. The cat's hunting instincts were honoured by the
Ancient Egyptians, but so was the cat's gentler side as a warm
and loving mother to her kittens. Bastet can be shown as a woman
with a feline head. There are disagreements among zoologists as
to when these animals first began to live with humans along the
Nile, and about which feline became the Egyptian pet. Cats do
not appear as household pets during the Age of the Pyramids,
though they were very popular animal companions in later times.
Cattle were thought to be sacred and beef was often used for
offerings to the gods or goddesses. A bull represented power,
aggression, masculinity, fertility; these could be the
attributes of kingship. . The cow's large eyes with long lashes,
and her generally quiet demeanor suggested a gentle aspect of
feminine beauty. Her gift of milk, which could sustain a human
child, became of symbol of love and sustenance. Hathor: Hathor
as the royal goddess. Her name means 'House of Horus." Her image
could take the form of a cow, a woman with a cow's head, or a
woman wearing the horns of a cow. As a motherly cow, she gave
the king her divine milk, and protected him as a cow protects
her calf. She was the goddess of love, music, singing, and
dance. She was one of the most important deities in the Age of
the Pyramids, and her popularity continued to the end of
Egyptian civilization. In the early economy of Egypt, cows were
wealth. A herd of cattle was a beautiful sight because it
represented wealth in the form of food, milk, hides, and work,
as oxen pulled the ploughs of farmers. Cattle dung was a
valuable fertilizer and had many uses in building. The Egyptians
admired many qualities in cows, besides their economic benefits.
The cow's careful tending of her calf was a model for
motherhood. In a time when many women died in childbirth, the
ability of cow's milk to sustain a human baby was deeply
appreciated. Cows, like people, love music and will happily
listen to a human singing, thus it made sense for Hathor to be
goddess of music. The big, gentle brown eyes of cows set a
standard for beauty. The Hawk A hawk, who soars high above the
world of humans, seeming to expend no energy in his long hours
aloft, and who - far seeing, -can swoop in an instant to capture
his prey in sharp talons, became a symbol of kingship. Anty:
Anty was a hawk god of Upper Egypt. He is shown as a hawk
sitting on a crescent moon, or in a boat. He became associated
with other hawk-gods, such as Sokar Horus: This god is shown as
a falcon, or as a man with the head of a falcon. In Egyptian,
his name is Her - the distant one. Like the good king who sees
everything in his kingdom, the hawk is noted for his sharp
vision. The sudden stoop of the hawk, as he leaves the distant
sky to attack and capture his prey, is like the quick and
decisive action of a king in defense of his country. Horus is
one of the oldest gods of the Egyptians. In the days when
powerful leaders were fighting to make one nation out of smaller
settlements, the early rulers were called Followers of Horus. On
the Narmer palette, the King is shown with a falcon whose one
human arm holds a rope that passes through the nose of a
defeated rival. The earliest way of distinguishing the name of a
king from the names of others was the serekh, which was a
rectangle representing the palace of the king, with a hawk on
the top. Originally, there were at least two gods called Horus.
One is the fifth child of Nut and Geb, Horus the Elder, and the
other is the son of Isis and Osiris. Over time, their stories
and attributes came together. An old story tells of how Osiris,
king of Egypt, was murdered by his brother, Seth. Seth was very
strong and powerful. He took over the country, and ruled well.
Isis, the wife of Osiris, hid the child she had born, and raised
him in secret. When Horus grew up, he claimed his father's
throne. Seth and Horus struggled for the kingship, but in the
end Horus' claim, as son of the previous king, was recognized by
a court of all the gods, and Horus became king. In Ancient
Egypt, each king was Horus. When a king died, Egyptians said
that the falcon had flown to Heaven and united with the Sun
Disk. The next king then became Horus. Like the Hawk, the king
was a fighter, a warrior. This is why Horus, when shown as a
hawk-headed man, wears an armored breast-plate.
Anubis: This jackal-headed god looked after the dead, and was in
charge of the important task of mummification. Anubis can appear
as either a black canine with long sharp ears, or as a man with
a canine head. The black colour of Anubis is not natural to
jackals or to the wild dogs of Egypt; it may refer to the
discoloration of a body after death and during mummification.
The black colour also refers to the rich dark soil of Egypt,
from which new growth came every year; in similar manner, the
dead would come to new life after burial. Dogs, as animal
companions, were present in Egypt from the very beginning.
Sometimes dogs were buried with their masters. It may have given
the Egyptians comfort to think of such an animal as guarding the
cemeteries, protecting the dead. There are other minor animals
that were held sacred by the Egyptians so because they were
beneficial others because they were considered evil. Examples of
these animals are:- The mongoose was respected because of its
skill and power of robbing nests and eating snakes. The snakes
were thought to be evil. Because the snake's poisonous bite, it
killed many people. The crocodile was known for its silent
attacks on people near the Nile water. The hippopotamus was
considered evil and very dangerous. They were killed to protect
the people. At night the hippopotamus would trample the fields.
The locusts were considered evil because they would destroy and
damage crops. Frogs and toads were the sign of fertility. The
number one hundred thousandths is a sign of a tadpole. Heket:
Frog-headed goddess of childbirth. Frogs, who produce vast
numbers of tadpoles, were popular as amulets to ensure
fertility. Babi is a deity shown in Baboon form, and it's from
his name that we get our word for these animals. Babi is
ferocious, even blood-thirsty, unlike the usually calm and
reasonable Thoth who also appears as a baboon. Other animals
represented by a god/goddess or sacred were ibises, dogs, rams,
baboons, shrews, fishes, gazelles, and lions. Farm Animals
Animals were one of the most important things about farming.
Animals helped ancient Egyptians with jobs like trampling in the
seeds, pulling the plow, eating unwanted grain or wheat and
providing them with food and drink. But having these animals may
have caused misfortune like if a donkey nibbled on someone
else's crops the farmer could threaten to take its owner to
court. Also if animals were sick the Egyptians had to do all the
work that they did. If animals were not marked they may have
been stolen. Some of the farm animals were goats, pigs, ducks,
cows, and geese.
About Author :
Egyptian radiologist, interested in egyptology.
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