Another change comes in the Fourth
Dynasty, and is to be noted first in the royal tombs,
as is always the case. The Egyptians had now
learned to cut stone and build with it. The burial
chambers hollowed in the solid rock were necessarily
smaller than the old chambers dug in the gravel and
no longer sufficient to contain the great mass of
furniture gathered by a king for his grave.
On the other hand, the chapels with the increase in
architectural skill could be build of great size.
Corresponding to these technical conditions we find
a great increase in the importance of the chapel.
It becomes a great temple, whose magazines were filled
with all those objects which had formerly been placed
in the burial chamber and were so necessary to the
life of the spirit. The temples of the third
pyramid, for example, contained nearly two thousand
stone vessels. Great estates were set aside
by will, and the income appointed to the support of
certain persons who on their side were obliged to keep
up the temple, to make the offerings and to recite
the magical formulas which would provide the spirit
with all its necessities.
Following closely the growth in importance
of the royal chapels, the private offering places
assumed a greater importance. The custom of
periodic offerings and the use of magical texts grew
until it reached its highest point in the Fifth Dynasty.
At this time there is a burial chamber deep underground
where the dead was laid securely in ancient traditional
attitude, with his clothing and a few personal ornaments.
As a rule, it is only the women, always conservative,
that have anything more. Above this grave, there
is a solid rectangular structure, with a chapel or
offering place on the side towards the valley.
The offering place is always there, no matter how
poor or small the tomb. But to understand just
what the Egyptian thought, we must turn to the better
tombs. The walls are of limestone carved with
reliefs representing the important processes of daily
life, sowing, reaping, cattle-herding,
hunting, pot-making, weaving, all those
actions which furnish the daily supplies. The
dead man is represented overseeing all this.
Finally, near the offering niche, he is represented
seated, usually with his wife at a table bearing loaves
of the traditional ta bread. Beside him
are represented heaps of provisions meat,
cakes, vegetables, wine and beer. A list of
objects is never missing, marked with numbers, a
thousand loaves of bread, a thousand head of cattle,
a thousand jars of wine, a thousand garments, and so
on. We know from latter inscriptions that these
words, properly recited, created for the spirit a
store of spirit objects in equal numbers. Below
the niche is an altar for receiving actual offerings
of food and drink. It is clear that the living,
coming to this offering place with or without material
offerings, could, by proper recitation, secure to
the spirit of the dead all its daily needs.
This offering niche is the door of the other world symbolically and actually. In many
graves the niche is carved to represent a door sometimes
opening in, and sometimes opening out. Moreover,
in several cases the figure of the dead is carved
half emerging from the opening door a figure
in all ways like the figure of the dead as he is represented
in the scenes from life. Beyond this door lives
the spirit of the dead.
In many offering chambers there is
a small hole in the wall, either in the offering niche
or in another place. If this hole be properly
lighted and the space beyond has not been changed by
decay or violation, the light falls on the face of
a statue of the dead looking forth to the world of
the living. For behind the wall is another chamber,
closed except for this small hole. This hidden
chamber contains statues of the dead often accompanied
by statues of his family and his servants. These
statues of the dead are labeled with his name, and
are said to be the abode of his spirit, his ka,
as the Egyptians called it. Moreover, all the
offering formulas named the ka as the recipient
of the food and drink. The duplicate spirit
of the man is his ka. In these statues
we have, then, a simulacrum of the man provided for
use of his ka perhaps to assist
the ka to the persistence of his earthly form,
and to the remembrance of his name. But what
were the uses of the subsidiary statues? What
spirit resided in them? The man’s son
in his turn died, and a similar room was made for
him with his statue and his subsidiary statues.
Did his ka live both in the statue placed
with his father’s statue and also in the statue
in his own grave? We have no answer. Probably
the Egyptian mind never formulated the difficulty.
But the new idea is clearly expressed.
It is no longer necessary to fill the burial chamber
with a mass of household furniture for the use of
the dead. All these things can be carved on the
wall of the burial chamber and so made effective for
his use. It was in any case necessary to supply
his food by means of the offerings, and it was quite
as easy to supply all his other necessities in the
same way. In other words, there is a distinct
growth in the use of magic to benefit the dead.
At the same time, we find the growth of the custom
of supplying a special abode for the ka a
simulacrum of the man, which assisted the ka
to retain the form of the living man and to remember
his identity.
The tendency of this period is then
to place a greater dependence on magic than on food,
drink, and grave furniture. It is, therefore,
not surprising to find introduced, for the first time,
the use of magical texts in the burial chamber, the
so-called Pyramid Texts. In the burial chamber
in the pyramid of Uñas, last king of the Fifth
Dynasty, and in the pyramids of the kings of the Sixth
Dynasty, the walls are covered with long magical texts
or chapters the oldest form of the so-called
book of the dead or “book of the going forth
by day.” The texts were probably somewhat
older, but are now used for the first time in this
manner, no doubt owing to the increased facility in
carving stone. In these the various powers of
the other world are invoked by the incidents of the
Osiris-Isis legend, to preserve the dead body, to
feed the ka, and to assist the other spirit,
the ba, in its struggles with supernatural
powers.
The pyramid texts introduce us to
three important ideas, (1) a curious plurality
of the spirit existence, (2) a condition of immortality
better than that of the old underworld or Earu, and
(3) most important of all, the identification of the
king with Osiris according to the terms of the Osiris-Isis
legend.
In all the older offering formulas
it is only the ka spirit which is mentioned.
Here is the body perishable and destructible; here
is the life, the ka which fills every limb and
vessel of the body and must, therefore, have the same
form. When death comes, the ka spirit,
the image of the man, remains near the body, and this
spirit it was which was the object of the rites and
offerings in the funerary chapel. But besides
this ka, it appears for the first time that
the king at any rate possesses also a soul called
a ba. In later times we see that every
man possessed a ba, and we learn that each
god possessed several ba’s. But
it is in the pyramid texts that we learn for the first
time of the ba of a man, and that man is a king.
When death comes, the ba takes flight in the
form of a bird or whatever form it wills. All
seems confused. The ka was near the body,
the ka was in the field of Earu, under the earth
ploughing and sowing; the ba is fluttering on
the branches of the tree on earth, the ba has
fled like a falcon to the heavens, and has been set
as a star among the stars. The dead king lives
with the gods and is fed by them. The goddesses
give him the breast. He lives in the Island
of Food. He lives in Earu, the Underworld, a
land like Egypt, with fields and canals and flood
and harvest. He shares with the gods in the offerings
made in the great temples on earth.
It is quite clear that all this is
an expression of dissatisfaction with the old belief
in the simple duplicate world, the world of Earu under
the earth. It is noteworthy that this first
appears in royal tombs. These texts are written
for kings alone. It is only many centuries later
that the texts of the book of the dead showed similar
possibilities open to the common man. This is
the usual course of all advances in Egypt,
architecture, sculpture, writing, whatever gain in
skill or knowledge there is, appears first in the
service of the royal family. Thus, even in the
conception of immortality, the new ideas, the better
immortality was first thought out for the benefit
of the king. The basis for this lay simply in
the life on earth. The king had come early to
have a sort of divinity ascribed to him. His
chief name was the Horus name. Menes was the
Horus Aha; Cheops was the Horus Mejeru; Pepy II was
the Horus Netery-khau. But he was also the son
of Ra, the sun-god, endued with life forever.
The king was a god, and it could only be that in
his future life he shared the life of the gods.
Thus, all is no more confused or mysterious than
is the conception of the life of the gods themselves.
But the texts go even further than
this and identify the dead god-man, who as Horus was
king on earth, with the father of Horus, the dead
god of the earth, Osiris. This identification
of the dead man with the dead god Osiris was later
enlarged to include all men, and became in the Ptolemaic
period the most characteristic feature of the Egyptian
conception of life after death.
The Osiris story as it can be pieced
together from the pyramid texts was
briefly thus: Keb, the earth-god, and Nut, the
goddess of the sky, had four children, Osiris
and Isis, Seth and Nephthys, who were
thus paired in marriage. Keb gave Osiris his
dominion, the earth, and made him the god of the earth,
and he ruled justly and powerfully. Seth, his
brother, was jealous, and by treachery enticed Osiris
into a box, which he closed and threw into the water.
Isis sought for the body of her husband until she
found it, and Isis and Nephthys, her sister, sat at
his head and feet and bewailed him. Re, the
greatest of the gods, heard Isis’s complaint;
his heart was touched, and he sent Anubis to bury
Osiris. Anubis re-joined his separated bones,
bound him with cloths, and prepared him for burial, that
is, mummified him. This is the form in which
Osiris is represented, as a mummy.
Isis then fanned her wings, and the air from her wings
caused the mummy to live. His life on earth,
however, was over, could not be recalled, so that
his new life could only be passed in the other world,
the world of the dead. Here Osiris became king,
as he had been king on earth. But Isis conceived
from the dead-living Osiris, bore a child in secret,
and suckled him, hidden in a swamp. When the
child, the sun-god Horus, grew up, he fought against
Seth to recover his father’s kingdom, and to
avenge his death. Both gods were injured in
the fight. Horus lost an eye. But Thoth
intervened, separated the fighters, and healed their
wounds. Thoth spat upon the eye of Horus and
it became whole. Horus, however, gave his eye
to Osiris to eat, and thereby Osiris became endowed
with life, soul, and power (i.e. in the underworld).
But Seth disputed the legitimacy of the birth of Horus,
and the great gods held a court in the house of Keb.
In this court, justice was done, the truth of Horus’s
claims was established, and he was placed on the throne
of his father. Osiris became the ruler in the
land of the dead, Horus in the land of the living.
The kernel of the story appears to
be this: Osiris is the god of the earth, and
his life is the life of the vegetation, dying and
reviving with the course of the seasons, mourned by
his wife Isis and succeeded by his son Horus, the
sun-god. It is apparently a form of the common
Tammuz or Adonis story of the Sémites. This
fact brings with it a suggestion which requires consideration.
The racial connection of the Egyptians
may seem to have little to do with immortality.
But I beg a moment’s consideration. The
two great dominating ideas of immortality are those
held by the Christians and by the Mohammedans, and
these are essentially the same idea. Both these
religions are creations of the Semitic race.
It is, therefore, decidedly of importance to find
that the Egyptian race, the creator of a third great
religion, has also a large Semitic strain. In
fact, the investigations of the last ten years appear
to show that this Semitic strain it was which gave
the Egyptian race its creative power and made possible
the development of the Egyptian civilization.
The Egyptian language furnishes us
with indisputable proof of the Semitic affinity, as
Professor Adolf Erman showed years ago. The
anatomical examination by Professor Elliot Smith of
a large number of skeletons, dated by careful excavations,
has given us a further clue. There is a prehistoric
race found in the earliest cemeteries neither
Negroid nor Asiatic in characteristics. In the
late predynastic and the early dynastic periods, when
the great development began, this primitive race had
become modified by an infiltration of broad-headed
people from the north. In the Old Empire, this
broad-headed people had become predominant, and remain
so throughout all Lower and Middle Egypt until the
present day. This intruding race, whose advent
marks the beginning of Egyptian civilization, I believe
to have been Semitic.
Remember this the texts
show clearly older ideas in conflict with the Osiris
belief. The primitive race was not, I believe,
a race of Osiris followers. Professor Erman
has stated that the Osiris belief is as early as 4200
B.C. That I am certain is absolutely untenable.
It is a question of Egyptian chronology in which
I beg to differ radically both from Eduard Meyer and
Professor Erman. In the formal calendar year
of three hundred and sixty-five days, there are twelve
months of thirty days and five intercalary days.
These intercalary days are called the birthdays of
Osiris, Horus, Seth, Isis, and Nephthys the
five most important figures in the Osiris myth.
According to Professor Meyer and Professor Erman,
this formal calendar was introduced in 4200 B.C.,
one of the occasions when the heliacal rising of the
star Sothis fell on the first of the month Thoth of
the calendar. However, if we accept with them
the date 3300 B.C. as the date of the First dynasty,
then in 4200 B.C. the Egyptians were just emerging
from a neolithic state. They were culturally
incapable of making a formal calendar and could have
no possible use for one. Either the calendar
did not originate in Egypt, or it was introduced in
2780 B.C., when again the heliacal rising Sothis fell
on the first of Thoth. At this time the Osiris
story was dominant, in the religion. We have
a race almost certainly Semitic, fusing the primitive
race during the period 3500-3000, and a few centuries
later we have a new religious idea dominating the
fused race. When we examine this new idea, the
Osiris belief, we find its earliest form nothing more
nor less than the common tammuz or Adonis story of
the Sémites. The conclusion lies very near
at hand, that the Osiris story is in fact the Tammuz
story, brought into Egypt by the earliest Semitic
tribes. In any case it was a race with a large
Semitic mixture which utilized this story in working
out a theory of immortality; and in all probability
we have in the Osiris-Isis religion a third great
religion due to the Semitic race.
However this may be, it is clear that
the craving of the king for a special immortality,
for an exalted future life, found its justification
through the Osiris-Isis myth. Horus was the
successor of Osiris as lord of the earth and the living.
The kings of Egypt were the successors of Horus.
The chief name of the king was his Horus name; Menes
was the Horus Aha, Cheops the Horus Mejeru.
When the king died, he became Osiris, and passed to
the kingdom of Osiris. He passed through the
underworld with the sun-god, abode there as Osiris,
the god-king, or sped to the heavens to the celestial
gods. Thus comes the entering wedge of a great
change in the conception of immortality an
ordinary immortality for the common man, a special
divine immortality for the divine man, the king.
[It appears probable that the deification of the king
and the assumption of a divine immortality for him
was prior in time to the statement of these beliefs
in the terms of the Osiris story.] Even at this early
age, it was, of course, clearly stated that the king
must be righteous, morally satisfactory in the eyes
of the world and of the gods. The gods, as always,
were on the side of the moral code, and especially
on the side of the organized religion. It is
perhaps significant that the chief sins of the kings
of the Fourth dynasty, so execrated by the Egyptian
priests in the Ptolemaic period, were sins against
the great gods. The other charges are for the
most part plainly slanders. In practice every
king whose family remained in power was justified before
gods and men, and took his place among the gods in
the islands of the blessed in the northern part of
the heavens.
The dead body was laid in the grave,
supplied with all these magic texts which were to
restore and revive the soul and guide it across waters
and through dangers to the place of Osiris. But
the chapel was not wanting, the cult of the ka
was maintained, the statues were placed in the hidden
room, the food and drink were brought daily to the
door of the grave. Thus, while a special immortality
was evolved for the king, the funeral customs continue
to show the same service of the ka as in the
earlier period.
In the Sixth Dynasty, there is a return
to the older practice of placing objects in the grave
itself. At present we are unable to point out
the reasons for this. Possibly experience had
taught men that endowments and craved walls left to
the care of descendants were insecure supports for
a life after death which was to last forever.
At any rate, the custom arose of making small models
in wood or stone or metal of those scenes and objects
which were carved in relief on the walls of the chapel, models of houses, granaries, of kitchens,
of brickyards; models of herds and servants and soldiers;
models of boats and ships; models of dance-halls with
the man seated drinking wine, around him musicians,
before him dancing girls; models of swords, of vessels,
of implements. Poorer people must be contented
with poorer things, down to the peasant who is buried
with the few little necessary pots and pans of his
daily life. But always, in every grave, the
chapel, small or great, is there. The endowment
of funerary priests continues. Every man, I suppose,
however poor, had some one to make at least one offering
at his grave. And so it was down to the New Empire.