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Crown of justification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ancient Egyptian funerary practice
Crown of justification on anencausticFayum mummy portrait with the name Isidora ("gifts of Isis") given in Greek (100-110 CE)

Inancient Egyptian religion, thecrown of justification(mꜣḥ n mꜣꜥ ḫrw[1]) was awreath orfillet worn by the deceased to represent victory over death in theafterlife. Its symbolism is based on Chapter 19 of theBook of the Dead, in which the wearer is said to be "justified" by a triumph over death just as the godOsiris eventually rose above his enemies. A ritual text was recited as the dead person was crowned.[2]

The crown of justification might be made of laurel,palm, feathers,papyrus, or precious metals. It was syncretized with thesolar crown of thesun godRe, and might be made of gold to mimic the properties of the sun.[3] Among the collections of theMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston, is an intricately woven papyrus wreath with bronze insets to reflect light.[4] In theRoman era, initiates into themysteries of Isis might wear a wreath of palm leaves to suggest the rays of the sun.[5]

In thePtolemaic andRoman Imperial periods,religious art intemples shows the king offering the crown toHorus or otherdeities. These crowns of justification take the form of acirclet, which sometimes has auraeus orwedjat-eye.[6]Rose wreaths might be substituted during the Roman period, in reference to the use of rose garlands and wreaths in theRomanized mysteries of Isis.[7] The crown of justification was in this way integrated into the broader festal and religious uses of floral and vegetative wreaths in the Roman Empire.[8]

Gallery

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  • Mummy portrait from Hawara (100-110 CE)
    Mummy portrait fromHawara (100-110 CE)
  • Crowned mummy portrait (2nd–3rd century CE)
    Crowned mummy portrait (2nd–3rd century CE)
  • Mummy portrait of a young man with gilded crown
    Mummy portrait of a young man with gilded crown
  • Fayum mummy portrait with the rhombus-shaped leaves representing laurel
    Fayum mummy portrait with the rhombus-shaped leaves representing laurel[9]
  • Young woman in red (90–120 CE)
    Young woman in red (90–120 CE)[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Wb. ii. 31. 5.
  2. ^Christina Riggs,The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt: Art, Identity, and Funerary Religion (Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 81.
  3. ^Corcoran and Svoboda,Herakleides, p. 32.
  4. ^Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, inv. 50.3788; Corcoran and Svoboda,Herakleides, pp. 32–33.
  5. ^As described byApuleius,Metamorphoses; Corcoran and Svoboda,Herakleides, p. 32.
  6. ^Riggs,The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt, p. 81.
  7. ^Riggs,The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt, pp. 81–82.
  8. ^Riggs,The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt, pp. 82–83.
  9. ^Lorelei H. Corcoran and Marie Svoboda,Herakleides: A Portrait Mummy from Roman Egypt (Getty Publications, 2010), p. 32.
  10. ^"Portrait of a young woman in red,"Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession no.09.181.6
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