Magic in ancient Egypt

Bibliographic Information

Magic in ancient Egypt

Geraldine Pinch

British Museum Press, c1994

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-185) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Egyptians were famous in the ancient world for their knowledge of magic. Religion, medicine, technology and what we would call magic co-existed without apparent conflict in Egypt, and it was not unusual for magical and practical remedies for illness, for example, to be used side by side. Magic was resorted to by everyone, from the pharoah guarding his country with elaborate magical rituals to the expectant mother wearing an amulet to safeguard her unborn child. Spells and magical objects were usually employed to protect the living or the dead, rarely for malign purposes. This book examines the connections between myth and magic, and the dieties - particularly the goddess Isis, and the protective lion-demon Bes - who had special magical importance. The techniques of magic, its practitionars and the surviving magical texts are discussed, as are the objects which were used in magic: figurines, statues, amulets and wands. A chapter is devoted to medicine and magic, and one to magic and the dead. Finally, Dr Pinch shows how elements and influences from Egyptian magic survived in or were taken up by later societies, right down to our own century.

Table of Contents

  • Egyptian magic
  • myth and magic
  • demons and spirits
  • magicians and priests
  • written magic
  • techniques of magic
  • magical figurines and statues
  • amulets
  • fertility magic
  • medicine and magic
  • magic and the dead
  • the legacy of Egyptian magic.

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