They would sit in total darkness, breathing through a bamboo straw and ringing a bell to signal they were still alive. No ringing meant that it was time to inspect the body. Once they confirmed the death, the tomb was sealed and left for one thousand days. If the body was rotting then they would reinter re-bury the corpse with little commotion. If you are looking for a cheaper alternative to mummification, that still holds all the same attention and glory, you could always donate your body to Body Worlds.
Dr Gunther von Hagens travelling exposition of dissected human bodies, animals, and other anatomical structures of the body that have been preserved through the process of plastination. So far there have been 17, body donations. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. How to get mummified 0 Comments. How can I do it? Following the funeral services, the funeral home transports your body to our sanctuary where we conduct your Mummification and Transference.
Note: Once your body is received by Summum, no family member or any other person will be able to see your body again. Upon completion, your body is sealed inside your Mummiform or casket Your Mummiform or casket is then laid to rest in a sanctuary or mausoleum or buried in a vault in the cemetery of your choice.
Because Mummification is a very elaborate, detailed, thorough, and lengthy process, it incurs extensive costs. And because we are a c 3 organization, we ask for a donation so that we can make this tradition available to you.
Artistic Mummiforms vary widely in cost, from tens of thousands of dollars to well over a hundred thousand dollars depending on how elaborate it is. As an alternative, you may select a capsule Mummiform that is placed inside a full couch 48oz. Your local funeral home can inform you of current costs for such a casket. The overall cost of your funeral and Mummification services can vary greatly and depends on the selections you make. Things to consider are the type of funeral service you would like, the Mummification process, the sarcophagus or casket, and the sanctuary or mausoleum.
Everyone has different financial considerations. The mummy was complete. The priests preparing the mummy were not the only ones busy during this time. Although the tomb preparation usually had begun long before the person's actual death, now there was a deadline, and craftsmen, workers, and artists worked quickly. There was much to be placed in the tomb that a person would need in the Afterlife. Furniture and statuettes were readied; wall paintings of religious or daily scenes were prepared; and lists of food or prayers finished.
Through a magical process, these models, pictures, and lists would become the real thing when needed in the Afterlife. Everything was now ready for the funeral. As part of the funeral, priests performed special religious rites at the tomb's entrance. The most important part of the ceremony was called the "Opening of the Mouth. By touching the instrument to the mouth, the dead person could now speak and eat.
He was now ready for his journey to the Afterlife. The mummy was placed in his coffin, or coffins, in the burial chamber and the entrance sealed up. Such elaborate burial practices might suggest that the Egyptians were preoccupied with thoughts of death. On the contrary, they began early to make plans for their death because of their great love of life. They could think of no life better than the present, and they wanted to be sure it would continue after death.
But why preserve the body? The Egyptians believed that the mummified body was the home for this soul or spirit. If the body was destroyed, the spirit might be lost. The idea of "spirit" was complex involving really three spirits: the ka, ba, and akh. The ka, a "double" of the person, would remain in the tomb and needed the offerings and objects there.
The ba, or "soul", was free to fly out of the tomb and return to it. And it was the akh, perhaps translated as "spirit", which had to travel through the Underworld to the Final Judgment and entrance to the Afterlife.
To the Egyptian, all three were essential. After death, the pharaohs of Egypt usually were mummified and buried in elaborate tombs. Members of the nobility and officials also often received the same treatment, and occasionally, common people.
However, the process was an expensive one, beyond the means of many. For religious reasons, some animals were also mummified. The sacred bulls from the early dynasties had their own cemetery at Sakkara. Baboons, cats, birds, and crocodiles, which also had great religious significance, were sometimes mummified, especially in the later dynasties. Ancient writers, modern scientists, and the mummies themselves all help us better understand the Egyptian mummification process and the culture in which it existed.
Much of what we know about the actual process is based on the writings of early historians such as Herodotus who carefully recorded the process during his travels to Egypt around BCE. Present-day archaeologists and other specialists are adding to this knowledge.
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