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uigphotos524880 Weighing of the Heart from Papyrus of Ani. For the ancient Egyptians, the Book of the Dead tells of the path the dead must go to the underworld. This image is a part of the book that belonged to the scribe Ani. The Papyrus Ani, as the papyrus isUnspecified//
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hiphotos013414 Detail from a Book of the Dead scroll, Ancient Egyptian, Ptolemaic Period, 332-30 BC. Weighing the heart of the deceased in a balance. The Ibis-headed god Thoth, secretary to the gods, presents the reckoning to Osiris, god of the dead, after-life and resurrection. Detail from Book of the Dead scroll, Ptolemaic Perioid (332-30 BC). From the Oriental Institute, Chicago, USA.//
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hiphotos278949 'The Weighing of the Heart', c13th century BC, (1915). In Ancient Egyptian mythology, Maat refers to the concepts of truth, balance, order, harmony, law, morality, and justice. Papyrus of Ani from the Book of the Dead. Ani and his wife Tutu are judged in the afterlife. Ammut will devour Ani's soul if he is unworthy, while Thoth prepares to record the verdict. From "The Myths of Ancient Egypt", by Lewis Spence. [George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd., London, 1915]//
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hiphotos100910 Image of the Egyptian deity Ammit at the weighing of the heart, from the papyrus of Keb 'Asher (a Book of the Dead), from the British Museum's collection.//
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hiphotos039833 Scene from the Book of the Dead of Any, Egyptian, c1275 BC, (c1900-1920). In the centre are the scales used for weighing the heart, attended by Anubis, the jackal-headed god of embalming. A print after a papyrus in the British Museum from Thebes, 19th Dynasty, from Art History and Literature Illustrations, by Jessie Noakes, Virtue and Co, (London, c1900-1920).//
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hiphotos060286 'Judgement of the Dead', from the Temple of Deir-el-Bahari, Egypt, c1025 BC (1936). Papyrus. Anubis weighs the heart of the deceased in the presence of Thoth, who is represented as a monkey squatting on the scales-beam, as Osiris watches from his throne. Plate taken from The Art of Ancient Egypt, published by the Phaidon Press (Vienna, 1936).//
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uigphotos130945 Psicostasia or weighing of the soul, Anubis, the jackal-headed funerary god, adjusts the scale with which to weigh the sins that are in the heart of the deceased, scene from the Book of the Dead, papyrus. Egyptian Civilisation.Padova/Musei Civici Eremitani/Museo Archeologico (Archaeological Museum)
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