Social Sciences, asked by Starz7166, 1 year ago

Long answers of why do you think the dead were buried with burial goods?

Answers

Answered by anonymous091827
0

People in most traditions believed in after-lives; they buried goods that they thought would be required by the demised person in his after life so that he could use them. In some other traditions, burial goods were intended to please the guardian spirit of the dead person and sometimes to please the god/goddess to whom the person was sacrificed to according to their beliefs.

Most commonly shown mummified, the shabti figures act as servants for the deceased in the afterlife – bringing them food or undertaking labour on their behalf, often as instructed in the inscription from the Book of the Dead with which they are decorated [2]. Because of this, they are regularly depicted holding hoes and with baskets on their back for collecting the farmed food for the deceased: see UC39708, a black steatite shabti from the 18th dynasty (c. 1500-1298 BC) and UC39765, a pottery shabti from the 19th (c. 1298 – 1187 BC).

The popularity of shabtis continued on throughout the New Kingdom, when they were increasingly being manufactured in faience: something explored by artist and archaeologist Zahed Taj-Eddin in the current exhibition ‘Nu’ Shabtis Liberation, in which 80 modern shabtis have escaped their enslavement to pursue their own hobbies amongst the Petrie’s cases [2].

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