This is what hieroglyphs and figures in ancient Egyptian temples looked like before their colors faded. They were recreated using a polychromatic light display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, following thorough research.
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This is what hieroglyphs and figures in ancient Egyptian temples looked like before their colors faded. They were recreated using a polychromatic light display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, following thorough research.
before you ask "are the gods mad at me?" THINK:
have you...
1. killed or maimed someone
2. killed or maimed an animal for purposes other than consuming/processing it
3. knowingly and purposefully hurled vile obscenities or insults at any god or gods
4. made it a life goal to be a terrible person
5. been a terf
IF YOU SAID NO TO ALL OF THESE QUESTIONS then girl you're fine go have a dr. pepper
I’m drawing Isis and Osiris for an art contest and I didn’t want him to feel left out
I asked ChatGb- Yea well i asked Thoth, and he said have you tried opening a book or forming your own opinions
Ancient Egyptian stela (painted sandstone), depicting a priest named Siamun and a woman named Tanuy worshiping Anubis. Siamun holds up his hands in the traditional posture of adoration, greeting Anubis, who sits enthroned and holding the was-scepter (a symbol of power and control, especially over the forces of chaos and the desert). The cartouche at right identifies the reigning pharaoh as Menkheperure, the throne name of Thutmose IV (r. ca. 1400-1390 BCE, 18th Dynasty, New Kingdom).
Dimensions: 45.6 cm (18 in) high x 59.1 cm (23.3 in) wide x 8.5 cm (3.3 in) thick. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, NY, USA. Photo credit: © The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Anna-Marie Kellen.
Hathor and Horus
Sekhmet, The Lady of Slaughter