Maat in Egyptian Autobiographies and Related Studies

Titel: Maat in Egyptian Autobiographies and Related Studies / Miriam Lichtheim
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Freiburg, Switzerland / Göttingen, Germany : Universitätsverlag / Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1992
Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (211 Seiten)
Format: E-Book
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis ; Band 120
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 3727808462
Zusammenfassung: The first of five studies explores "Maat", the Egyptian term for the moral order that governed men and gods in their respective spheres. The growth of the concept of Maat is traced from the Old Kingdom to the Late Period by a sequence of autobiographical and other texts in which individual Egyptians define and declare their understanding of, and adherence to, the code of right action were truthfulness and fairness. Adherence to Maat created the good order of society, while abandoning Maat plunged society into chaos. Man's knowledge of right, and his ability to do it, were defined as originating in his heart and in his nature: virtue was innate and inner-directed. In the texts of the New Kingdom the gods came to be addressed as partners of man's rightdoing by providing inspiration and guidance. At no time, however, were the gods given the role of formulating moral precepts. Man remained the maker of his ethos. The second study demonstrates that the "Negative Confessions" of the Book of the Dead were based squarely on the moral declarations of autobiographical inscriptions, declarations which the scribes of the Book of the Dead rephrased in negative terms, in keeping with the BD's ritual-magical purpose. The third study pinpoints in vocabulary form the principal terms for the virtues and vices used in the texts cited. The fourth study shows that the grammatical constructions of the "Appeal to the Living" - the request by the deceased for the prayers of the living - underwent changes which scholars have failed to recognize, a failure resulting in unwarranted emendations and faulty translations. Lastly there is a grave stela of Polemaic date with a text which, instead of the usual hopefulness, records a long cry of despair.