The Book of the Dead was a collection of spells and characters collected on a papyrus roll. The papyrus roll was put inside an empty statue, or at times wrapped inside the mummy wrappings, and put in the tomb with the various things which the dead individual would require for life following death.
The spells and descriptions in the Book of the Dead gave a dead individual the learning and power they expected to travel securely through the threats of the netherworld (a place the dead went promptly after death). They likewise talked about a definitive objective of each antiquated Egyptian – endless life.
The Book of the Dead enlightened the dead individual regarding the scene of the netherworld which they would travel through, the divine
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The lifeless individual may join the gods – loving Osiris or going with the sun god Ra. Or then again they may enter a peaceful heaven known as the Field of Reeds – a scene like that of Egypt, with canals to cruise on and fields loaded with products to guarantee that the dead never went hungry
Copyists and painters worked out and delineated the Book of the Dead papyrus rolls. Infrequently the greater part of the roll was at that point composed and the tomb proprietor simply had their own particular name and picture included.
The Book of the Dead, utilized for around 1,500 years, is a piece of a custom of giving religious writings to the lifeless. The most punctual of these writings are found in Old Kingdom (around 2686– 2181 BC) pyramids and were expected for dead lords. After some time, writings for the dead wound up noticeably accessible to different individuals from the celebrated family, nobles and the working classes. At first messages were composed on tomb walls. Later from around 2050 to 1750 BC they were cut on to coffins. The Book of the Dead created from these box messages and has been found on boxes, covers, papyri and gauzes. The most expand Books of the Dead were made in the New Kingdom time frame (around 1550– 1069 BC). It at last quit being utilized as a funerary content in the main century