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Correct, in a edition to a few more.
Clark has written a few books which are quite good, not overly academic but academic and to the point.
Ancient Egyptian Coffin Texts another one that is academic.
Pity my archaeology grandfather is no longer alive. You could try looking into George Glenn Cameron, my grandfather. He did extensive near east and some orient work.
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Takacs, Gabor - Etymological Dictionary of Egyptian Vol 1.
Oh .. keep in mind that as beautiful and interesting as it is, it is simply a text on how they dealt with the dead and guiding them to the afterlife.
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You know, two vastly overlooked deities in Egypt were Ptah and Amun. Ra and Horus or Osiris can also be helpful.
Ptah was sort of the prime mover if you will, replaced by Amun then b Osiris. Now Horus is the new consciousness.
Another point is that most gods were territorial, not in terms go how humans are territorial, but where exactly they were worshipped.
Any chance you moved a bunch of file I uploaded on Egypt into the Egypt folder for benefactors? I was looking for a shit ton of books I uploaded, and cannot find many of them.
Any chance you moved a bunch of file I uploaded on Egypt into the Egypt folder for benefactors? I was looking for a shit ton of books I uploaded, and cannot find many of them.
Don't forget that Cliff Notes used to have triple size/length of pages on world mythology bookd.
I want to say the Golden Bough, but there was a writer around that authors time that wrote on mythology, Joseph Campbell maybe? Or maybe Frazier.