Akademik

Religion
   For most of Egyptian history no attempt was made to develop a coherent religious theology for the entire country. Egypt consisted of many cities, each of which had a god or goddess to whom the inhabitants were particularly attached, along with the deity’s family represented in a local triadand often an animal or animals sacred to the local divinity. For example, Meretseger, the snake goddess of Thebes, represented a purely regional deity; however, some gods and goddesses, for example, Ptah of Memphis; Thoth of Hermopolis; or Osiris, the god of the dead, were worshipped on a national level throughout the country. The patronage of the king elevated others to the status of supreme deity, like the sky god Horus, the sun god Re of Heliopolis, the formerly obscure god Amun of Thebes, the Ptolemaic deity Sarapis, and the goddess Isis during the Roman Period. More influential deities might absorb a local god or combine to form a composite god, like Re-Harakhty or Amun-Re. Various local templesas at Heliopolis or Hermopolis conceived different myths of creation in which their god naturally played the crucial role. The only attempt to impose a more uniform worship—that of the Atendisk—by Akhenaten ended in failure.
   In most cities, the gods were worshipped in major temples built or enlarged through the favor of the king and staffed with priests appointed by him. It was their duty to carry out the rituals to maintain maat and appease the gods. The bulk of the priests inherited their rank and were trained in their calling by temple schools and their relations, but the king could and did assign the top posts to royal favorites who could have been from priestly families but also from the royal family, the bureaucracy, or the military. He could also shift priests from one temple to another. Worship was not confined to the temples.
   Unlike the state temples from which the local population would have been largely barred, common folk would have access to small local shrines and chapels, sometimes in their own homes, as reflected in the religious practice at Deir el-Medina. Stelae and statues of the deceased with prayers giving their name were erected in the shrines, tombs, and temples to keep the individual’s memory alive. The ancient religion was eventually replaced by Christianity and evolved into the distinctive Coptic Church.
   See also Afterlife; Anat; Anhur; Anubis; Anukis; Apis; Astarte; Bastet; Buchis; Geb; Hapy; Hathor; Heryshef; Horus; Iah; Kherpi; Khnum; Khonsu; Mahes; Mehit; Meretseger; Min; Mnevis; Montu; Mut; Nefertum; Neith; Nekhbet; Nephthys; Nun; Nut; Qudshu; Renenutet; Repit; Reshep; Sakhmet; Satis; Seth; Shai; Shu; Sokar; Sons of Horus; Sopdu; Sothis; Tatenen; Taweret; Tefnut; Wadjet; Wepwawet.
Historical Dictionary Of Ancient Egypt by Morris L. Bierbrier

Ancient Egypt. A Reference Guide. . 2011.