Of the nations which have contributed
to the direct stream of civilization, Egypt and Mesopotamia
are at present believed to be the oldest. The
chronological dispute as to the relative antiquity
of the two countries is of minor importance; for while
in Babylonia the historical material is almost entirely
inscriptional, in Egypt we know the handicrafts, the
weapons, the arts, and, to a certain extent, the religious
beliefs of the race up to a period when it was just
emerging from the Stone Age. In a word, Egypt
presents the most ancient race whose manner of life
is known to man. From the beginning of its history that
is, from about 4500 B.C. we can trace the
development of a religion one of whose most prominent
elements was a promise of a life after death.
It was still a great religion when the Christian
doctrine of immortality was enunciated. In the
early centuries of the Christian era, it seemed almost
possible that the worship of Osiris and Isis might
become the religion of the classical world; and the
last stand made by civilized paganism against Christianity
was in the temple of Isis at Philae in the sixth century
after Christ.
It is clear that a religion of such
duration must have offered some of those consolations
to man that have marked all great religions, chief
of which is the faith in a spirit, in something that
preserves the personality of the man and does not perish
with the body. This faith was, in fact, one of
the chief elements in the Egyptian religion the
element best known to us through the endless cemeteries
which fill the desert from one end of Egypt to the
other, and through the funerary inscriptions.
It is necessary, however, to correct
the prevailing impression that religion played the
greatest part in Egyptian life or even a greater part
than it does in Moslem Egypt. The mistaken belief
that death and the well-being of the dead overshadowed
the existence of the living, is due to the fact that
the physical character of the country has preserved
for us the cemeteries and the funerary temples better
than all the other monuments. The narrow strip
of fat black land along the Nile produces generally
its three crops a year. It is much too valuable
to use as a cemetery. But more than that, it
is subject to periodic saturation with water during
the inundation, and is, therefore, unsuitable for
the burials of a nation which wished to preserve the
contents of the graves. On the other hand, the
desert, which bounds this fertile strip so closely
that a dozen steps will usually carry one from the
black land to the gray, the desert offers
a dry preserving soil with absolutely no value to the
living. Thus all the funerary monuments were
erected on the desert, and except where intentionally
destroyed they are preserved to the present day.
The palaces, the towns, the farms, and many of the
great temples which were erected on the black soil,
have been pulled down for building material or buried
deep under the steadily rising deposits of the Nile.
The tombs of six thousand years of dead have accumulated
on the desert edge.
Moreover, our impression of these
tombs has been formed from the monuments erected by
kings, princes, priests, and the great and wealthy
men of the kingdom. The multitude of plain unadorned
burial-places which the scientific excavator records
by the thousands have escaped the attention of scholars
interested in Egypt from the point of view of a comparison
of religions. It has also been overlooked that
the strikingly colored mummies and the glaring burial
apparatus of the late period cost very little to prepare.
The manufacture of mummies was a regular trade in
the Ptolemaic period at least. Mummy cases were
prepared in advance with blank spaces for the names.
I do not think that any more expense was incurred
in Egyptian funerals in the dynastic period than is
the case among the modern Egyptians. The importance
of the funerary rites to the living must, therefore,
not be exaggerated.