The Liturgy of Funerary Offerings

by E. A. Wallis Budge | 1909 | 31,069 words

The book “Liturgy of Funerary Offerings” focuses on the “Book of the Opening of the Mouth”—dealing with an essential Egyptian funerary ritual. This ritual, crucial for mummifying pharaohs, involved offerings of food, beverages, and other items, alongside priestly litanies. These offerings were believed to spiritually nourish the deceased’s “Ka” and...

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Chapter 3.23: The Thirty-sixth Ceremony

[Full title: The Thirty-sixth Ceremony]

In the next ceremony the SEM priest offered two linen bandlets, or scarves, or sashes, called unkhu to the deceased, and as he did so the Kher heb said-

"Watch thou in peace. The goddess TAAT watcheth in peace, the goddess TAAT watcheth in peace. The Eye of Horus which is in the city of Pe-Tep watcheth in peace. The Eye of Horus which is in the temple houses of Net watcheth in peace. Receive thou the milk-[white] and bleached bandlets of the goddess Ur-a. Cause ye, O bandlets, that the Two Lands may submit to this Unas, even as they bow down before Horus, and make ye the Two Lands to be in awe of Unas, even as they are terrified before Set. Tarry ye before Unas in his divinity. Open ye his way at the head of the KHU (or, Spirits), and let him stand at the head of the Spirits. O Anpu-Khenti Amenti, forwards, forwards, to the Osiris Unas."

The two bandlets are assumed to have been made by the goddess Taat, who presided over the apparel of the deceased, and provided them with raiment made by her own hands; as she wove the bandlets she wove into them her magical protection, which not only preserved their wearers from the discomforts of nakedness, but assured to them the respect of the gods and spirits who


The Sem priest presenting two bandlets.

saw them. One bandlet also carried with it the protection of the Horus-god who dwelt in the city of Pe-Tep, or Buto, and the other the protection of the Horus-god who dwelt in the city of Net (Neith). Horus of re-Tep was the son of Isis-Uatchit, and Horus of Sais was the son of Net, the goddess to whom the invention of the art of weaving was attributed. The city of Sais was famous in all ages for the production of textile fabrics, and here was situated "Hetmenkh," the "Temple of woven stuffs." [1] The opening lines of this passage in the Liturgy are differently translated by Dümichen and Maspero. In his translation of the text of Unas Maspero rendered the signs by "Vets-toi," "clothe thyself," but later he came to the conclusion that is not the equivalent of , and that it is to be read res, i.e., "Watch," or "Keep vigil." Thus his renderings are:—

Vets-toi en paix! Vets ton vetement en paix! Que Taït se vete—Vetements de fete, deux—en paix! Œil d'Hor dans Doup, en paix! Œil d'Horus dans les demeures de Nit, en paix! Reçois le linge blanc! Donne qu'elles se courbent pour cet Ounas, les deux terres, etc.

Veille en paix! veille Tait en paix, veille Taitit en paix! Œil d'Hor qui est dans Dopou en paix, veille Œil d'Hor qui est dans les Chateaux de Nit en paix! La plus brillante(?) des nourrices(?), celle qui orne le maitre du tombeau (?), donne que les deux terres se courbent devant ce Pepi Nofirkeri, etc. [2]

The rendering of Dümichen agrees with the older rendering of Maspero as far as "Nit, en paix!" but for the following words he has "Nimin in Empfang die milchfarbige und die gebleichte von der Göttin Ur-a. Bewirket, dass sich in Ehrfurcht beugen die Länder," etc. [3]

At this stage in the service an interval appears to have been allowed to the deceased to absorb the meat and drink offerings which had been presented to him, and to take possession of the bandlets, etc. In the temples the presentation of offerings to the god was nearly always accompanied by a burning of incense, [4] for the gods rejoiced in the mingled odours of the objects offered and the burning incense.

Footnotes and references:

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[1]:

De Rougé, Geographie, p. 26.

[2]:

Pyramides de Saqqarah, p. 362.

[3]:

Grabpalast, i. 28.

[4]:

Moret, Rituel, p. 119.

Other Egypt Concepts:

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Discover the significance of concepts within the article: ‘Chapter 3.23: The Thirty-sixth Ceremony’. Further sources in the context of Egypt might help you critically compare this page with similair documents:

Una, Set, Horu, Peace, Deceased, Spirit, Burning incense, Divinity, Religious figure, Divine connection, Burning of incense, Two lands, Magical protection, Sem-priest, Maspero, Eye of Horus, City of Sais, Kher heb, Son of Net, Text of Unas, Meat and drink offerings, Osiris Unas, Textile fabric.

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