Perspectives on lived religion II: the making of a cultural geography

Ancient Egyptian elites invested immense cultural and economic efforts in preparing for their afterlives. However, the diversity of choices open to them is often overlooked. These choices included tomb size, tomb location, and architectural design, as well as tomb decoration, and the selection of ce...

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Weiss, Lara 1980- (Editor) ; Staring, Nico (Editor) ; Twiston Davies, Huw (Editor)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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WorldCat: WorldCat
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Published: Leiden Sidestone Press [2022]
In: Papers on archaeology of the Leiden Museum of Antiquities (27)
Year: 2022
Volumes / Articles:Show volumes/articles.
Series/Journal:PALMA 27
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Egypt (Antiquity) / Folk religion
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
B Conference papers and proceedings
B Walking Dead (2 (2019) Cairo)
B Cultural Geography (Egypt) Congresses
B Egypt Religious life and customs Congresses
B Égypte - Religion - Congrès
B Egypt
B Religion
B Géographie culturelle - Égypte - Congrès
B Cultural Geography
B Egypt Religion Congresses
Online Access: Table of Contents
Description
Summary:Ancient Egyptian elites invested immense cultural and economic efforts in preparing for their afterlives. However, the diversity of choices open to them is often overlooked. These choices included tomb size, tomb location, and architectural design, as well as tomb decoration, and the selection of certain grave gifts. Their choices depended on financial means, but also on contemporary fashion, among other factors. Ancient sites were visited by the living to commemorate and rejuvenate human ancestors and the gods, as individual acts or as part of large-scale processions. They also visited cemeteries because of new building activities, or to visit already-ancient monuments. The daily interactions of the living with their ancestors and gods are traceable in the evidence of lived religious practices, the transmission of texts and images, and the processes which shaped the landscape. Older monuments and stories remained accessible, and the ongoing use of the site created a palimpsest landscape, showing the results of millennia of human activity. These results of past activities could hold special significance for later generations, but new meanings often supplanted older interpretations. Building on the success of 'Perspectives on Lived Religion', 'Perspective on Lived Religion II' presents the results of a conference held in Cairo, September 29th - October 1st 2019
ISBN:9464261196