What did Ancient Egyptians Believe About Ghosts and Spirits?
Ancient Egyptian beliefs in the afterlife and ghosts consistently
changed over more than a couple thousand years, but belief in the
existence of the human soul after the physical body perishes has
remained a standard throughout time.
Early ancient Egyptians thought that part of the human soul was
made up of a separate entity not unlike other religions' beliefs in a
god giving life to all people. This "other" part of man was described as
"light" and called, "Khu." Later, the definition of Khu would
morph into a word for ill-spirited ghosts that possess the bodies of the
living for purposes of torment (sort of a more scary meaning, similar
to popular beliefs in demons, if you will).
These ancient Egyptian beliefs in the soul and spirit would later
become more complex and consist of 5 parts: the heart (thoughts and
feelings), shadow (we can assume this to mean the darker or negative
nature of man), soul (the personality known as "Ba"), spirit (the
life-giving source known as "Ka") and name. When the body expires, the
Ba and Ka were believed to be back together, again, and called the
"Akh." It is the Akh that is said to be the spirits (or possibly ghosts)
of Egyptian people. The Akh could be either a blessing or curse upon
the living, effectively interacting with people to affect their
feelings, both positively or negatively. Akh, Egyptian "ghosts," have
been blamed for things such as bad dreams, ailments and mental
suffering. This idea would be very similar to modern spiritual beliefs
in "ghost attachments."
Sightings of ghosts in Egypt have, of course, been reported and
documented over many centuries. Curses of people being condemned to walk
the desert as disembodied spirits have been some of the more
interesting tales of Egyptian haunting. Pharaoh Akhenaten was
purportedly condemned by priests who, after his passing from this world,
cursed him to be trapped as a ghost who must walk the Earth for the
rest of time. Consequently, sightings of Akhenaten still surface, even
today; whether or not these are true ghost sightings of the ancient
Pharaoh cannot be confirmed. After all, his banishment took place some
3300 years ago!
In contrast, in some ancient beliefs of Egypt, the ghost or spirit of the person would live with the body in its tomb.
This is why food would be interred along with other items the person
might potentially need in the aftelife. The tombs of Egyptian mummies
might also contain a small statue, made to look like them, as a backup
plan should the body ever be destroyed. The spirit of the person was
said to transfer to the statue in such a case.
Interestingly, in 2013, a strange report surfaced in England about a
10" statue taken from a mummy's tomb and the possible spirit activity
attached to it. The Egyptian relic, on display for 70 years in the same
spot on a glass shelf at the Manchester Museum, began slowly turning
away from visitors. Time-lapsed video recorded the statue-turning
phenomenon multiple times. It was revealed that the icon, placed in a
row among 3 other statuettes from tombs, moved slowly during museum
visitation hours. This has led some scientists to believe that
vibrations from people walking near the display might have caused the
stone statue to rotate 180 degrees on the smooth, glass surface. But
others have asked, if true, why has the ghost-like trick taken 7 decades
to suddenly begin happening? Is it a discontent spirit within the
effigy? No one knows, for sure.
No comments:
Post a Comment