Page from the Book of the
Dead of Hunefer
From Thebes, Egypt
19th
Dynasty, around 1275 BC
The judgement of the dead in the presence of
Osiris
This is an excellent example of one of the many
fine vignettes (illustrations) from the Book
of the Dead of
Hunefer.
The scene reads
from left to right. To the left,
Anubis
brings Hunefer into the judgement area. Anubis is also shown
supervizing the judgement scales. Hunefer's heart,
represented as a pot, is being weighed against a feather, the
symbol of
Maat,
the established order of things, in this context meaning
'what is right'. The ancient Egyptians believed
that the heart was the seat of the emotions, the intellect and the
character, and thus represented the good or bad aspects of a
person's life. If the heart did not balance with the
feather, then the dead person was condemned to non-existence, and
consumption by the ferocious 'devourer', the
strange beast shown here which is part-crocodile, part-lion, and
part-hippopotamus.
However,
as a papyrus devoted to ensuring Hunefer's continued
existence in the Afterlife is not likely to depict this outcome, he
is shown to the right, brought into the presence of Osiris by his
son
Horus,
having become 'true of voice' or
'justified'. This was a standard epithet applied to
dead individuals in their texts. Osiris is shown seated under a
canopy, with his sisters
Isis
and
Nephthys.
At the top, Hunefer is shown adoring a row of deities who supervise
the judgement.
R.O. Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Book of t, (revised ed. C. A. R. Andrews) (London, The British Museum Press, 1985)
R.B. Parkinson and S. Quirke, Papyrus, (Egyptian Bookshelf) (London, The British Museum Press, 1995)
S. Quirke and A.J. Spencer, The British Museum book of anc (London, The British Museum Press, 1992)