The
ushabti , also called shabti shabtis or with a number of variant spellings ,
plural ancient Egypt ushabtiu was a funerary figurine used in ancient Egypt.
Oushebtis were placed in tombs among the grave goods and were intended to
replace the deceased, he / she is required to do manual labor in the afterlife
. The figures usually carried a hoe on his shoulder and a basket on the back.
They were usually written by the use of hieroglyphics typically found on the
legs.
The
practice of using shawabties originally from the Old Kingdom ( 2600-2100 BC)
with the use of the reserve size heads in limestone, which were buried with the
mummy. Most were minor ushabtis size and many products in multiples - they
sometimes covered the floor around a sarcophagus. Oushebtis exceptional are
larger , or produced by an of-a -kind work of a master.
Due
to the banality of the shabti timeperiods by all Egyptian , and the desire to
museums around the world to represent ancient Egyptian art objects, the shabti
is one of the objects most frequently represented in the displays of Egyptology
. Produced in very large numbers, ushabtis with beetles, are the most numerous
of all ancient Egyptian antiquities to survive.
The
term shabti applies to these figures before the twenty-first dynasty of Egypt ,
but after the end of the First Intermediate Period, and really only the figures
listed in chapter six of the Book of the Dead . Otherwise, they could be better
defined by the generic term , funerary figurines.
The
shawabties were figures of servants who carried out the tasks required of the
deceased in the underworld. The ushabtis were not effective because of their
art, they were effective because they had inscriptions on them. The writing was
thought to change thoughts and wishes into action. Therefore, it was necessary
for them to have shawabties owners name on them, and they were also in a
hieratic sentence send them to action.
The
scribe Nebseni , the designer in the temple of Ptah, said: ( Oh you shabti
figure Nebseni scribe , son of the scribe Thena , and the lady of the house
Muthrestha if I am called , or if I tried to make a work regardless of the work
that is to be done in the underworld - behold, for your opposition will be
canceled - by a man in turn, dropped the judgment on you instead of on me
always , for sowing the fields , fill streams with water , and bring the sand
from east to west .)
The
figure Shabti answers , ( I'm here and will come when you offer me .)
The
shabtis were a distinct class of funerary figurines in the region of Thebes
during the New Kingdom.
The
term ushabti became common after the 21st Dynasty and remained in service until
the Ptolemaic era..
It
is believed by some that the ushabti term means (disciple ) or voice in ancient Egyptian , because the figurine
" answered" to the deceased and made all the routine tasks of daily
life of his master in the beyond that the gods had provided for them. ,
Although it is difficult to reconcile this derivation with the form of shabtis
.
A
shabti Pharaoh of Egypt Pinedjem I at the Brooklyn Museum .
Registration
Shabti often contain Chapter 6 of the Book of the Dead , translated by :
Illuminates the Osiris [name of
deceased , whose word is truth . Hail
Shabti Figure! If the Osiris [name of deceased ] will not be decreed to do all
the work that must be done in Khert - Neter , let everything that stands in the
way be removed from him - whether to plow the fields , or to fill the channels
with water , or make sand from the East to the West.
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