About This Book
The text surveys ancient Egyptian religious thought, classifying deities (animal-headed, anthropomorphic, cosmic, abstract, and foreign) and examining beliefs about human nature, the afterlife, creation myths, and ritual practice. It treats priesthood organization, sacred books, private devotion, animal worship, and ethical views, and traces how religious forms and symbols operated in temples and cemeteries. Chapters outline funerary doctrine, cultic rites, and theological categories, offering an organized, comparative account of how religious institutions and ideas evolved and interacted across historical periods.
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