Significance of Egyptian
Synonyms: Nile, Cairo, African, Ancient, Arab
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
The concept of Egyptian in local and regional sources
The keyphrase "Egyptian" highlights the ancient civilization's mathematical prowess, specifically their use of values to calculate the area of a circle, reflecting their advanced understanding of geometry in historical context.
From: The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda
(1) The people who, along with the Babylonians and the Jews, never got any farther than the idea of the double and did not reach the idea of the Âtman beyond, as discussed by the speaker.[1] (2) The Egyptians are mentioned to have a soul idea that is of a double, and they took such solicitude to preserve the dead body by embalming and building pyramids.[2] (3) This is a race of people who were much older than the Aryans, and they are a separate race, and their civilization antedates all the European civilization.[3] (4) This group is described as having crossed the Red Sea from Punt and extended their kingdom, creating a great civilization.[4]
From: History of Science in South Asia
(1) The text mentions the Egyptians as having used specific values to determine the area of a circle.[5]
The concept of Egyptian in scientific sources
The keyphrase "Egyptian" highlights an ancient civilization known for its significant contributions to homeopathy, paralleling other cultures like the Incas and Aztecs, emphasizing their historical importance in alternative healing practices.
From: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
(1) This is one of the ancient peoples whose history includes the basic principles of homeopathy, along with the Incas and Aztecs.[6]
From: Journal of Public Health in Africa
(1) This refers to the population of the country, where the study was conducted, and the health-related data and statistics are being analyzed.[7]
From: Religious Inquiries (Journal)
(1) A group of people who refused to consider famine a punishment from God and blamed Moses, their explicit assertion of refusal showing Pharaoh’s cultural domination.[8]
Classical concept of 'Egyptian'
From: Egypt Through The Stereoscope
(1) The Egyptians, with British officers and English regulars, began constructing a railway through the desert from Wadi Halfa for the recovery of the Sudan.[9] (2) This describes a civilization that, as far back as the earliest dynasties, had learned the excellence of the local granite, quarrying it at the first cataract under the protection of warships.[10] (3) People who no longer speak the language of ancient tombs, contrasting with others who still hold fast to their ancestral tongue.[11] (4) The list of cities and countries embraces almost all such names known to the Egyptians, revealing the cultural and geographical knowledge of the time.[12] (5) This person believed that the deceased continually received the gifts depicted in the paintings due to the magical charms pronounced over them. This person commonly married their sisters.[13]
From: Ancient Egypt the Light of the World
(1) Both the dates and data for the Christian celebration of the festivals were Egyptian, continued with the calendar and the festivals.[14] (2) Under the name of khabsu in Egyptian, the stars are synonymous with souls, according to the text, rising nightly from Amenta.[15] (3) They always kept on building closely in accordance with some primal type like this of the ark. In the beginning the earth itself was a mount or table-land that rose up out of the abyss as a kind of ark amidst the waters of space.[16] (4) A profound study of the Ritual reveals the fact that the wisdom of Egypt was the source and fountainhead of the books of wisdom assigned to Moses and David, to Solomon and Jesus, indicating the origins of spiritual teachings.[17] (5) In Egyptian, the wise spirits are the akeru, which are the wise spirits of the instructed dead, and in eating the fruit of the tree the eaters are to become the wise as spirits.[18]
From: Legends Of The Gods
(1) The Egyptians associate Osiris with the Nile and Isis with the land it fertilizes, showcasing a deep connection between their deities and the natural environment, which is central to their beliefs.[19] (2) The Egyptians had very specific rules about animal sacrifice, and they only sacrificed red-colored bulls while rejecting any animal with a single black or white hair.[20] (3) These people hold Typhon in great contempt and do everything possible to vilify it, associating the color red with it and mistreating those who have a ruddy complexion.[21] (4) A group that commemorates Sesostris, similar to other cultures honoring heroes without considering them deities, highlighting a cultural practice.[22] (5) The Egyptians described Hermes, Typhon, Horus, and Osiris with specific physical traits, suggesting they were human.[23]
From: The Gods of the Egyptians Vol 1
(1) The dynastic Egyptians gave titles to Ptah which reveal that his main characteristics did not change from the period of the IInd Dynasty to that of the Ptolemies and Romans.[24] (2) The Egyptians are referenced in the text as people who held certain beliefs about the god Ra and also practiced magical rituals and incantations.[25] (3) The Egyptians had arrived at certain ideas concerning Maa, and they divided mankind into four classes in late dynastic times.[26] (4) Egyptian beliefs are the foundation for many of the details of the mysteries described in the books of “Pistis Sophia”.[27] (5) Believed that deities experienced emotions and mortality like humans in ancient times, but later thought only the bodies of divinities perished, leading to a provision for their souls.[28]
From: The Literature of the Ancient Egyptians
(1) The text claims that Egyptians have turned into foreigners, suggesting a loss of identity and cultural integrity within their own land.[29] (2) Driving down their cattle from the shelter of the stronghold which thy father Thothmes [I] built to keep back the tribes of the South and the tribes of the Eastern Desert.[30] (3) They had the belief that all the great deities once inhabited Earth and governed the land in a manner similar to the Pharaohs, with whom they were quite familiar.[31] (4) The text provides insight into the Egyptian beliefs about the afterlife, creation myths, and the roles of various gods in their religious system.[32] (5) An ancient civilization whose beliefs are illustrated in the Papyrus of Ani, particularly concerning the afterlife destination known as the Elysian Fields.[33]
From: Egyptian Magic
(1) The Egyptians believed that some sicknesses could be cured by medicaments, while others required both drugs and the recital of words with power to effect a cure.[34] (2) The provided document explains that the Egyptians took great pains to preserve the physical body from decay through mummification and other costly funeral ceremonies.[35] (3) Egyptians, like most Oriental nations, believed knowledge of names and how to use them was important for both the living and the dead.[36] (4) The provided text discusses the beliefs of the ancient Egyptian people regarding the afterlife, religious practices, and the importance of words of power.[37] (5) They believed that it was possible to transmit to the figure of any man, or woman, or animal, or living creature, the soul of the being which it represented, and its qualities and attributes.[38]
From: Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt
(1) They heard a voice, feared it, and endeavored to silence it, striving to still the voice of the heart, not yet confessing, but insistently maintaining innocence, later disclosing the consciousness of guilt to a deity.[39] (2) The association with Re in which the "Egyptian" took the greatest delight was the voyage with him across the sky, showing a cultural value placed on celestial journeys.[40] (3) The Egyptians called the curious comrade of an individual, identical in external appearance with that of the prince, the "ka", and it was born with the prince, being communicated to him by the god.[41]
From: The Book of the Dead
(1) They gave the name neter to the great and supreme power. They endowed the neteru with love, hatred, and passions of every sort and kind.[42] (2) It is a term relating to the culture and people who created the Papyrus of Ani and other artifacts. The volume attempts to illustrate religious views from native sources.[43]
From: Popular Literature in Ancient Egypt
(1) This culture sought to look at the happy aspects of their time on earth, hoping to continue their existence in the next world among the gods.[44]
From: The History of Herodotus
(1) The Egyptians share a dietary practice with the Libyans, abstaining from the flesh of cows, and the text also indicates that both the shield and the helmet came to the Hellenes from them.[45] (2) The Egyptians, specifically the Hermotybians and Calasirians carrying knives, were disembarked from ships and not appointed to serve in the land-army with Xerxes.[46] (3) Among the forces fighting for Xerxes, the Egyptians distinguished themselves in the sea-fight by capturing five ships of the Hellenes along with their crews, showcasing their effectiveness in naval combat.[47] (4) The Egyptians contributed two hundred ships, equipping their soldiers with helmets of plaited work, hollow shields, spears for sea-fighting, and large axes, showing their distinct naval warfare equipment.[48] (5) The Egyptians were constructing one of the bridges over the Hellespont from Abydos, using papyrus rope.[49]
From: The Liturgy of Funerary Offerings
(1) The "Egyptians" are mentioned in the context of their dairy production, noting that they likely did not produce butter in the way it is understood today.[50] (2) The "Egyptians" attached great importance to the use of water ceremonially, believing it to be a principal source of life, linking it to the creation of the gods.[51] (3) The Egyptians are described as a practical people who, despite their reverence for kings, likely understood the impossibility of kings providing funerary gifts to all subjects.[52] (4) According to the Egyptians, ceremonies and formulae aimed to bring back the Ka, or double, to the dead man or a statue, emphasizing the importance of reuniting the soul with its physical form.[53]
From: The Odyssey of Homer (English translation)
(1) People who were ravaged by a character's men, leading to a battle and the capture of many of the character's men.[54] (2) The Egyptians are one of the peoples Menelaus encountered during his travels, as he recounts his journey to Telemachus and Pisistratus.[55]
