Ancient Egyptian god of the dead, represented as a jackal or as a man with the head of a jackal. In the Early Dynastic period and the Old Kingdom he was preeminent as lord of the dead, but he was later overshadowed by Osiris. Anubis was associated with the care of the dead and was credited with the invention of embalming, an art he first practiced on the corpse of Osiris. Later assigned the role of conducting souls into the underworld, he was sometimes identified in the Greco-Roman world with Hermes
The Patron god of embalmers A god of the dead who is shown as a jackal or as a man with a head of jackal Closely connected with the nomes of Middle Egypt, and the 12th, 17th, and 18th, nomes of Upper Egypt
Anubis, in Egyptian mythology, god of the dead He was considered the inventor of embalming, the guardian of tombs, and a judge of the dead The Egyptians believed that at the judgment he weighed the heart of the dead against the feather of truth
The black jackal-headed god of mummification - figures prominently in the murals in the tombs on the West Bank
an Egyptian God, who is either seen as a Jackal or as a Jackal headed man, to the Egyptian's Anubis was a protective and guiding force The God Anubis bought the dead over from the land of the underworld to the hall of Justice
God of mummification He is usually shown with the head of a jackal and the body of a man He is often shown in paintings leading the deceased to the "weighing of the heart ceremony "
God of the dead and mummification Often depicted as a black dog, or a man with the head of a dog As Lord of the Necropolis, Anubis was a protector of tombs One of his earliest titles was "Foremost of the Westerners " He remained popular through the Roman Period
An Egyptian deity, the conductor of departed spirits, represented by a human figure with the head of a dog or fox
anubis
Расстановка переносов
A·nu·bis
Произношение
Этимология
() From Latin Anūbis Ancient Greek Ἄνουβις (Anoubis).