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Development of religion and thought in ancient Egypt : lectures delivered on the Morse Foundation at Union Theological Seminary

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Egyptology series
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The American archaeologist James H. Breasted (1865-1935) is best remembered for his 1906 four-volume Records of Egypt, which contains fresh readings and translations of almost all of the ancient Egyptian historical inscriptions available at the time, and remains an important resource.

In this 1912 work, originally delivered as lectures, Breasted discusses the significance of the 'Pyramid Texts', preserved on fifth- and sixth-dynasty pyramids at Saqqara, and recently published in full, to the understanding of ancient Egyptian religious thought.

He argues that mortuary practice as revealed by archaeology gives indications of the beliefs of a pre-literate society, but that by the time of the earliest inscriptions the Egyptian belief system was well established.

He is particularly interested in the development of a moral sense in the context of the traditional pantheon with its multiple aspects of human/animal divinities, and in the influence of the developing Egyptian empire on its religion.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108081991 / 9781108081993
Paperback / softback
299.31
10/05/2018
United Kingdom
English
404 pages
22 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More