The Egyptian Book of the Dead cover art

The Egyptian Book of the Dead

4000 Year Old Secrets of the Afterlife

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The Egyptian Book of the Dead

By: Ani
Narrated by: Sripad Jagannatha Das, The Orb
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About this listen

The Book of the Dead is an ancient Egyptian funerary text written on papyrus and used from the beginning of the New Kingdom.

The book was placed in the coffin or burial chamber of the deceased, and was part of a tradition of funerary texts which includes the earlier Pyramid Texts and Coffin Texts, which were painted onto objects, not written on papyrus. A number of the spells which make up the Book continued to be separately inscribed on tomb walls and sarcophagi, as the spells from which they originated always had been.

The path to the afterlife as laid out in the Book of the Dead was a difficult one. The deceased was required to pass a series of gates, caverns and mounds guarded by supernatural creatures.[These terrifying entities were armed with enormous knives and are illustrated in grotesque forms, typically as human figures with the heads of animals or combinations of different ferocious beasts. Their names—for instance, "He who lives on snakes" or "He who dances in blood"—are equally grotesque. These creatures had to be pacified by reciting the appropriate spells included in the Book of the Dead; once pacified, they posed no further threat, and could even extend their protection to the dead person

Most owners of the Book of the Dead were evidently part of the social elite; they were initially reserved for the royal family, but later papyri are found in the tombs of scribes, priests and officials. Most owners were men, and generally, the vignettes included the owner's wife as well.

In this rare one-of-a-kind audiobook adventure the listener is met with the unexpected nature of a grand literary trek.

Public Domain (P)2022 Icon Audio Arts
Religious Studies

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Appaling production

The narrator, as I understand, is the owner of this production company, the only possible way this could ever be uploaded. Absolutely zero reading skills as every word is chopped up into syllables and a break between words. From the first paragraph, it seems that the narrator is almost falling asleep with zero interest in the book. then starts to shuffle between sleep deprived reading and fast chopping up the words narration.
Even though I finished this, it's absolute torture to listen and a disgrace for ancient wisdom.

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