Significance of Una
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
Classical concept of 'Una'
From: The Liturgy of Funerary Offerings
(1) Unas is a central figure, receiving various offerings, purifications, and presentations of the Eye of Horus throughout the described rituals.[1] (2) A name associated with Osiris. This entity receives offerings of spring fruit, flowers, and vegetables during a ceremony led by a Sem priest.[2] (3) This is the name of a pharaoh from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt, often associated with the Pyramid Texts and beliefs about the afterlife.[3] (4) "Unas" is identified as an Egyptian pharaoh, and is included in the offering, potentially suggesting his deification or integration into the divine realm through the ritual.[4] (5) A figure, linked with Osiris, who is the recipient of the Eye of Horus in a ritual involving the presentation of two vessels of a specific beverage.[5]
From: Egypt Through The Stereoscope
(1) Una was a court favorite who left an account of how he led troops into the Peninsula of Sinai and brought his army by sea on an expedition north of the land of the sand-dwellers.[6]
From: The Literature of the Ancient Egyptians
(1) Unas was a king of the fifth dynasty for whom the oldest of the pyramids containing the Pyramid Texts was built.[7]
From: The Gods of the Egyptians Vol 1
(1) Unas is a central figure in the text, described as consuming the thesu and livers of gods, absorbing their life, power, knowledge, and ultimately achieving everlasting life.[8]
From: Legends Of The Gods
(1) This is a text written towards the close of the Vth Dynasty that contains many spells, reflecting the importance of such incantations in ancient Egyptian religious practices.[9]
From: The Book of the Dead
(1) Unas is a figure whose body and flesh are equated to the body and flesh of another, indicating a deep connection and transformation into the God of Heaven.[10]
