in San Jose, California. RC 623 The
ẖt (Egyptological spelling:
khet), or physical form, had to exist for the soul (
kꜣ/
bꜣ) to have intelligence or the chance to be judged by the guardians of the
underworld. Therefore, it was necessary for the body to be preserved as efficiently and completely as possible and for the burial chamber to be as personalized as it could be, with paintings and statuary showing scenes and triumphs from the deceased's life. In the Old Kingdom, only the pharaoh was granted mummification and, thus, a chance at an eternal and fulfilling afterlife. By the Middle Kingdom, all dead were afforded the opportunity.
Herodotus, an ancient Greek scholar, observed that grieving families were given a choice as to the type and or quality of the
mummification they preferred: "The best and most expensive kind is said to represent [Osiris], the next best is somewhat inferior and cheaper, while the third is cheapest of all." Because the state of the body was tied so closely with the quality of the
afterlife, by the time of the
Middle Kingdom, not only were the burial chambers painted with depictions of favourite pastimes and great accomplishments of the dead, but there were also small figurines (
ushabtis) of servants, slaves, and guards (and, in some cases beloved pets) included in the tombs, to serve the deceased in the afterlife. Before a person could be judged by the gods, they had to be "awakened" through a series of
funerary rites designed to reanimate their mummified remains in the afterlife. The main ceremony, the
opening of the mouth ceremony, is best depicted within Pharaoh
Seti I's tomb. All along the walls and statuary inside the tomb are reliefs and paintings of priests performing the sacred rituals and, below the painted images, the text of the liturgy for opening of the mouth can be found. This ritual which, presumably, would have been performed during interment, was meant to reanimate each section of the body: brain, head, limbs, etc. so that the spiritual body would be able to move in the afterlife. ==
Sah (spiritual body)==