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Aug 22

egypt-museum:
“  Anubis and Osiris with the Deceased  Greco-Roman mummy cases and shrouds were often painted with images reflecting pharaonic religious beliefs about the hereafter but adapted to suit the prevailing Greco-Roman style.
Egyptian...

egypt-museum:

Anubis and Osiris with the Deceased

Greco-Roman mummy cases and shrouds were often painted with images reflecting pharaonic religious beliefs about the hereafter but adapted to suit the prevailing Greco-Roman style. 

Egyptian divinities of the afterlife feature prominently, and include some or all of the following: Osiris, god of the afterlife and the underworld; his sisters Isis (also his wife) and Nephthys, also considered a protector of the dead. Anubis, the jackal- or jackal-headed god is also often shown as patron of the mummification process and responsible for delivering the soul of the deceased into the kingdom of Osiris. The falcon god Horus often makes an appearance too. The Greco-Roman tradition had no problem about mixing in classical motifs. 

So in addition to representations of the Egyptian funerary gods, shrouds and mummy cases might depict figures in Roman dress. Greek elements might be included too: pomegranates, boughs of myrtle and rose, and kraters or goblets of wine, all alluding to eternal life in Greek iconography. On this Roman-era Egyptian shroud, the deceased in the center is dressed in Roman style, flanked to the right by the Egyptian deity Anubis.

Funeral shroud from 2nd Century CE Roman Egypt. Now in the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow.

(via thatlittleegyptologist)

fuckyeahasexual:

queerdo-mcjewface:

fandomsandfeminism:

image

This Pride Month we remember to support ANYONE who has to fight for their humanity.

Happy Pride.

BLM.

[Image description]

Poster. The background is black and it has three figures who appear to be throwing bricks. Text at the top in all-caps white reads “You only gave us rights because we gave you riots”. Text at the bottom in all-caps pink reads “Queer power”.

[End ID]

Let’s boost the fuck out of this for the version of the edited one falls in google’s ranking!

(via )

rarecultcinema:
“Rats: Night of Terror (1984) dir. Bruno Mattei
”

rarecultcinema:

Rats: Night of Terror (1984) dir. Bruno Mattei

(via swampthingy)

egypt-museum:
“ Mummy of Hatshepsut Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt from 1479 to 1458 BC, was a queen depicted as a pharaoh. If his tomb was unearthed in 1903, her mummy was not identified until 2006.
Photo: Kenneth Garrett
”

egypt-museum:

Mummy of Hatshepsut

Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt from 1479 to 1458 BC, was a queen depicted as a pharaoh. If his tomb was unearthed in 1903, her mummy was not identified until 2006.

Photo: Kenneth Garrett

(via egypt-museum-deactivated2021071)

(via horrorbmoviepunk-deactivated202)

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