The Sungod's Journey through the Netherworld: Reading the Ancient Egyptian Amduat
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"The ancient Egyptian sources come alive, speaking to us without seeming alien to our modern ways of thinking. Andreas Schweizer invites us to join the nocturnal voyage of the solar barque and to immerse ourselves, with the 'Great Soul' of the sun, into the darkness surrounding us. Here in the illustrations and texts of the Amduat, threats hidden in the depths of our soul become visible as concrete images, an analysis of which remains ever worthwhile: even in the guise of the evil, ominous, or dark side of godhead with which Schweizer concerns himself. The netherworld into which we descend underlies our own world. Creative energies of dreadful intensity are active there, and only death, to which all must surrender, makes us truly alive by offering us regeneration from the depths."—Erik Hornung, from the Foreword
The Amduat (literally "that which is in the netherworld") tells the story of the nocturnal journey of Re, the Egyptian Sungod, through the netherworld from the time when the sun dies, after setting in the west, to its rebirth at sunrise in the east. In the middle of the night, in the profoundest depths of the netherworld, this resurrection is made possible by a mystical union of the sun with the mummified body of Osiris, god of the dead. This great mystery of the union between the freely moving soul of the Sungod, longing for the bright and boundless sky, with Osiris's corpse, which is irrevocably bound to the subterranean realm of the dead, evokes the renewal of all life and the restoration of totality. In the Egyptian belief system, the pharaohs and in later times all blessed dead embarked on this same "night-sea journey" after death, ultimately becoming one with Re and living forever.
The vision of the afterlife elaborated in the Amduat, dating from around 1500 B.C.E., has been influential for millennia, providing the model for an entire genre of Egyptian literature, the Books of the Afterlife, which in turn endured into the Greco-Roman era. Its themes and images persisted into gnostic and alchemical texts and made their way into early Christian portrayals of the beyond. In The Sungod's Journey through the Netherworld, Andreas Schweizer guides the reader through the Amduat, offering a psychological interpretation of its principal textual and iconographic elements. He is concerned with themes that run deep and wide in human experience, drawing on Jungian archetypes to find similar expression in many cultures worldwide: sleep as death; resurrection as reawakening or rebirth; and salvation or redemption, whether from original sin (as for Christians) or from the total annihilation of death (as for the ancient Egyptians).
Andreas Schweizer
An outdoor writer and photographer, Jim Dean served as editor of Wildlife in North Carolina for eighteen years and continues to write his monthly "Our Natural Heritage" column for the magazine. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.
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Reviews for The Sungod's Journey through the Netherworld
3 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The author made a few interesting connections, but much of his argument (heavily doctrinaire) was forced and, like the solar cycle and the psychic events he references, repetitive. His text was grotesquely pimpled with exclamation points; I would have thought a Cornell editor might have weeded a score or so of them out.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The author made a few interesting connections, but much of his argument (heavily doctrinaire) was forced and, like the solar cycle and the psychic events he references, repetitive. His text was grotesquely pimpled with exclamation points; I would have thought a Cornell editor might have weeded a score or so of them out.
Book preview
The Sungod's Journey through the Netherworld - Andreas Schweizer
The Sungod’s Journey
through the Netherworld
Reading the Ancient Egyptian Amduat
Andreas Schweizer
Edited by David Lorton
Foreword by Erik Hornung
Cornell University Press
Ithaca & London
Contents
Foreword to the German Edition
Acknowledgments
Editor’s Note
Immersion into Darkness
The Amduat—The Book of the Hidden Chamber
The Title of the Amduat
First Hour: The Jubilation of the Baboons
Getting in Touch with the Animal Soul
Second Hour: The Fertile Region of Wernes
First Encounter with the Psychic Totality: Creation and Destruction
Third Hour: Rowing on the Water of Osiris
The Experience of Love through the World of Psychic Images
Fourth Hour: The Snake-Land of Sokar
The Dark Night of the Soul
Fifth Hour: The Mystery of the Cavern of Sokar
The Regenerative Force of Depression
Sixth Hour: The Corpse of the Sungod and the Rebirth of Light
Re-Union of the Opposites
Seventh Hour: Apopis, Enemy of the Sun
The Unstable Balance of the New
Eighth Hour: Provision with Clothes
Religious Renewal
Ninth Hour: The Sungod’s Crew
Manifestation of the New
Tenth Hour: The Bodyguard of the Sungod
Ready to Fight for the New
Eleventh Hour: The Renewal of Time
The Religious Dimension of Time and the New Consciousness
Twelfth Hour: The End of the Primeval Darkness
The Long-Awaited Birth
Closure: The Five Stages of Renewal
Chronology
Glossary
Bibliography
Illustration Credits
Foreword to the German Edition
by Erik Hornung
Around the year 1500 BC, an ancient Egyptian created an illustrated vision of the hereafter, the Amduat, that ranks among the great achievements of humankind. In Egypt its impact endured for more than a millennium: it served as the model for a whole literary genre, today known as the Books of the Afterlife or Books of the Netherworld, whose tradition endured well into the Graeco-Roman era. Scholars believe it even left its mark in certain Gnostic texts, in the Hermetic tractates, and in early Christian visions of the beyond.
As Egyptian art and literature are usually anonymous, the name of the Amduat’s author is lost forever. But even after thousands of years, his work still speaks to us. It is a multimedia
presentation, using both illustrations and texts to describe the subterranean realm of the Hidden Chamber
of the hereafter. We have, however, had to learn anew how to respect these messages. Only after many generations did Egyptologists become conscious of what a treasure had been entrusted to them. Concerning the Amduat, certain highly respected scholars once expressed scorn regarding fantasies
and grotesque faces
incubated in the witch’s cauldron of priestly sorcerers. Other pioneers, though, such as Champollion and later Maspero and Piankoff, realized the value of the Books of the Netherworld and made early attempts to decipher them. Since then, research into the texts and images has made huge progress, attracting attention far beyond Egyptology. In particular, there has been great interest among modern psychologists, since the Amduat offers material comparable to that found in modern dreams, especially with its talk about the phenomenon of regeneration, which concerns not only the Sungod and the dead but also the living human soul, even that of people today.
Dr. Andreas Schweizer has made the most successful attempt so far at a psychological decipherment of the Amduat. In his treatment, the ancient Egyptian sources come alive, speaking to us without seeming alien to our modern ways of thinking. He invites us to join the nocturnal voyage of the solar barque and to immerse ourselves, with the Great Soul
—that is, with the sun—in the darkness surrounding us. Here in the illustrations and texts of the Amduat, threats hidden in the depths of our soul become visible as concrete images, an analysis of which remains ever worthwhile: even in the guise of the evil, ominous, or dark side of godhead with which Andreas Schweizer concerns himself. The netherworld into which we descend underlies our own world. Creative energies of dreadful intensity are active there, and only death, to which all must surrender, makes us truly alive by offering us regeneration from the depths.
Acknowledgments
More than ten years have passed since this book was published in German—Seelenführer durch den verborgenen Raum: Das ägyptische Unterweltsbuch Amduat (Munich, 1994)—and this edition has long been out of print. It is therefore a great pleasure to me that Cornell University Press has been willing to publish this revised edition in English.
In the meantime, I have become increasingly cognizant of the fact that ancient Egypt is not only the source of many basic Judeo-Christian ideas but also the actual origin of the underlying beliefs of alchemy, that is, the thought of those ancient Greek and medieval philosophers who, more than any other scholars, were deeply aware of the richness of the human psyche and its capacity to regenerate, again and again, from stagnation and depression. Especially as we encounter it in the New Kingdom, ancient Egyptian belief in the continuous regeneration of the Sungod in the netherworld—and, with him, of all beings and creation—found beautiful expression in the writings of the medieval alchemists, and from there, these beliefs gradually transformed into the seedbed of modern depth psychology. It was C. G. Jung who discovered these treasures of alchemy, which are deeply rooted in the history of humankind. In his time, however, the principal Egyptian sources had yet to be published. Thanks mainly to Erik Hornung and his assistant, Elisabeth Staehelin in Basel, and to their tremendous achievements in decipherment and translation, we today have access to all the major Books of the Netherworld and their incredibly rich symbolism. The intent of the present book is to illuminate some of this symbolism for the reader.
I am greatly indebted to David Lorton, who corrected my translation in a most sensitive and excellent manner. I enjoyed every moment of our collaboration. I am also grateful to the staff of Cornell University Press, and especially to Peter Potter, for their willingness to include this book in their publishing program. Many thanks go to my dear friend Tony Woolfson, who encouraged me in this project from the moment of its inception and who read the final manuscript with great care. Finally, I give my heartfelt thanks to my wife, Regine Schweizer-Vüllers, who, throughout these past years, has supported me with her deep understanding of the psychological implications of my work.
Andreas Schweizer
Zollikon, May 1, 2009
Editor’s Note
In this book, the following conventions have been followed in citations from ancient texts:
Parentheses () enclose words or brief explanations that have been added for clarity.
Square brackets [] enclose words that have been restored in a lacuna.
An ellipsis…indicates that a word or words in the original text have been omitted in the citation.
An ellipsis in square brackets […] indicates the presence of a lacuna for which no restoration has been attempted.
A question mark in parentheses (?) indicates that the translation of a word or phrase is uncertain.
English-speaking Egyptologists have no single set of conventions for the rendering of ancient Egyptian and modern Arabic personal and place names. Most of the names mentioned in this book occur in a standard reference work, John Baines and Jaromir Malek, Cultural Atlas of Ancient Egypt (New York: Checkmark Books, 2000), and the renderings here follow those in that volume. The principal exception is the omission of the typographical sign for ayin; this consonant does not exist in English, and it was felt that its inclusion would serve only as a distraction to the reader.
In what follows, passages from the Bible are cited from the New Revised Standard Version.
D. L.
Immersion into Darkness
At the end of a long, hot day, as the African sun approaches the west, the life of all creatures unfolds itself anew. Now sheltered by the cool evening breeze, the fields are plowed, hoed, planted, and watered. Everywhere in the villages, fires are lit to cook the evening meal. In the gathering twilight, people grow happier and louder. It is as though with their chatting, joking, and laughter, their music and dance, they want to ward off the approaching spirits of the night. But once the light of the very last fire disappears, its dim glow resisting in vain the growing darkness, night has definitively fallen. Happy are those who have found the redemption of sleep, thus escaping the loneliness of night.
The ancient Egyptians always knew it: darkness cannot be warded off, once he, the great Sungod, having completed his daily work, has become old and weary. Then he descends into the depths of the night and the netherworld. Here, another law reigns, the law of the night, of silence and death.
And yet, it is just this law that mysteriously resurrects the glorious light of the sun to new life. How else could it be that at the beginning of every new day, all life awakes, full of new energy and youthful freshness? An Egyptian sun hymn puts it into simple words:
They awake to see your (Re’s) beauty,
when you appear, they gaze amazed,
recognizing each other,
when you send them your beams (of light).¹
Many Egyptian texts are pervaded with the idea of sunlight regenerating in the depths of the netherworld. When the sun sets at the western horizon and night suddenly falls, a mysterious process of transformation begins in the interior of the earth, finding its completion in the miracle of the birth of the sun in the morning. Just as the sun renews and regenerates day by day, the same might happen to everyone exhausted from the strains of daily life, and to every deceased. Together with the Sungod, his soul might descend to the realm of the dead to be protected by the god against the dangerous and meandering paths of the netherworld, since he lives from the god’s light.
The ancients were fascinated by the adventurous journey to the other world. As early as the Middle Kingdom, in the bizarre, labyrinthine sketches of the so-called Book of the Two Ways depicted on the bottom of certain coffins in the Middle Egyptian necropolis of el-Bersha, we find an early description of this journey to the hereafter. Probably no other people have reflected so much on death and life in the beyond, or expended such great effort on behalf of the deceased, as did the Egyptians. In the New Kingdom, around 1500 BC, this reflection led to the Books of the Netherworld, in which the hereafter is described in a nearly scientific manner. These compositions reveal an astonishing richness of thought and an amazing abundance of deep insights into the nature of humans and of the world.
Psychologically speaking, the Egyptian descriptions of the netherworld are an attempt to comprehend what C. G. Jung has hypothetically called the collective unconscious.
The collective unconscious, including its archetypes, is one of Jung’s most significant discoveries. It refers to a psychic stratum that developed in the course of thousands of years, and it includes those layers of the psyche that transcend the personal unconscious, that is, the emotional experiences and reminiscences of one’s personal life. The collective unconscious consists of the sum of the instincts and their correlates, the archetypes. Just as everybody possesses instincts, so he also possesses a stock of archetypal images.
² Whereas the instincts are typical modes of action, the archetypes are typical modes of apprehension. In their totality, the archetypal images, which take a similar form in all human beings, represent the entire treasure of the spiritual experiences of humankind. This treasure finds its expression in the religious images, mythical
primal ideas, and texts of all ages and cultures, but also in any numinous experience of an individual in the present. Anyone who is touched by such an experience or vision in his or her innermost being has the potential to become a religious leader in his or her time. This is true for all charismatic personalities.
In what the ancient Egyptians expressed through religious—partly mythical, partly magical—images and texts, we today, using psychological language, can easily recognize a surprising, almost scientific precision. But whether it is expressed in religious or in scientific terms, the underlying idea remains the same. The ancient Egyptians found amazing truths not so much in a conscious and psychological manner, as we do, but rather intuitively. It had taken thousands of years, from the very beginning of human reflections, via the first attempts to formulate or incorporate numinous power in a symbol, to achieve the almost incredible spiritual maturity and richness that we encounter in the Books of the Netherworld from the New Kingdom. One of the oldest symbols of divine presence was a pole with a cloth wrapped around it, which became the ntr-hieroglyph, the character for god,
around 3000 BC. For millions of years, the human spirit lay dormant until it began to leave visible traces. At some point, man erected a divine pole between heaven and earth, so that in its fabric, woven by human hands, the wind might play. In such a way, within the confusing and infinite extent of the cosmic realm, archaic man established an orientation point in which he recognized the center of the world. In the lowlands of Mesopotamia, the same spiritual intent inspired the construction of ziggurat-temples. It was not, as the Hebrew Bible claims, the hubris of man that caused these temples to tower into the heights but the yearning for a sense of place—of home—in the boundlessness of the cosmos.
Thus awoke a playful, creative mind that henceforth restlessly surrounded the mystery of the divine and of the human soul with ever-new signs and symbols. Though the ancient ntr-pole has long since lost its numinous magic, even now, it retains some effect in the form of the national flag flying on its flagpole.
From a psychological perspective, the New Kingdom Books of the Netherworld reflect the gradually increasing realization of an underlying stream of archetypal images continuously accompanying the events of the day and daily affairs and thus giving meaning and direction to them. The destiny of the individual, like that of nations and cultures, is always embedded in a hidden stream of slow but continuous transformation within the basic archetypal constellations. Throughout the long history of Egypt, there were many critical instances of political and cultural transition. In these transitional periods, a change in the hitherto valid principle of the dominant archetypal image took place, causing a collapse of the old value system and followed by a regeneration; that is, these were periods of chaos and renewal. Often, after the ravages wrought by wars and catastrophes, a new god image arose on the horizon. As we shall see later, in Egypt, after the catastrophic breakdown of the Old Kingdom, it was Osiris, god of the dead, who came into the foreground during the Middle Kingdom, generating a spiritual renewal such as the land of the Nile had never before seen.
A spiritual development as expressed by the Books of the Netherworld always occurs in connection with major political and social reorganizations. Egyptian history gives us the unique opportunity to observe the hidden stream of unconscious archetypal factors that flows beneath the surface of what can be grasped as history.
³ It is very likely that the archetypal factors causing the mental transformations of this people were also responsible for radical political changes. Let us have a look, therefore, at the great historical and intellectual developments that transpired in ancient Egypt.
Toward the end of the third millennium, a long, flourishing period, the Old Kingdom abruptly came to an end, and with it a tremendously fruitful, stable, reliable, and well-established order, personified in the goddess Maat. Politically, socially, and spiritually, the land fell into chaos and disaster. For centuries, its inhabitants had lived in peace under the patronage of the god-pharaoh, and now they suddenly had to fight for their bare survival. But in the midst of this turmoil, in which every hitherto stable and reliable order fell apart, as though the rule of law no longer prevailed, there grew a spiritual force mirrored in a new genre of texts, the so-called Instructions or Wisdom Literature.⁴ These doctrines radiate a newly strengthened consciousness of the individual. In the Complaints of the Eloquent Peasant, for instance, an ordinary oasis dweller, a man of the people, stands up before a royal administrator and makes eloquent speeches demanding the restoration of Maat, that is, a just social order and an elemental human solidarity. Such self-assured behavior on the part of an individual toward even a high civil servant, much less the king or a god, would have been unthinkable in the Old Kingdom.
At the outset of the Middle Kingdom, when this injustice had become patently clear to all, attention turned, more than ever before, to the hereafter and to the Judgment of the Dead by Osiris. In the Instruction for Merikare, we read of Osiris and his court:
Don’t trust in length of years,
They view a lifetime in an hour!⁵
Earthly life was still appreciated and highly valued, but after the injustice the people had suffered, their deepest yearning turned more and more toward the beyond and to Osiris, who ruled over the realm of the dead.
What contemporaries might have viewed as a chaotic, meaningless decline in reality may be ruled by an unfathomable destiny, law, or meaning.
⁶ This becomes especially clear when we consider the changes in the concept of the hereafter that occurred from time to time in the course of the long history of Egypt.
The royal monuments of the Old Kingdom and early Middle Kingdom were the pyramids. At the edge of the desert, they still rise majestically to the sky as if to protect the inhabitants of Egypt from the boundless emptiness of the no-man’s-land. The pyramid was not, as we might believe, a demonstration of royal power but rather a symbol of the primeval creation of the world in honor of the deities, a structure comparable to the Christian cathedrals of the Middle Ages. Just as the primeval hill
of solid land once emerged from the dark waters to establish earth and sky firmly against dissolution and chaos, so this reproduction of the primeval hill made in stone—namely, the pyramid—was supposed to oppose the powers of chaos and death. May the buried king and the life of the people entrusted to him be protected, and may he share in the world’s created order forever! Even more: the king was buried in the desert, symbolically at the edge of this world, close to the dangerous abyss, since only here, so near to chaos, could life be renewed. In ancient Egypt, the monuments constructed according to cultural values were in the service of the miraculous regeneration of life at the edge of dissolution and death.
The Egyptian pharaoh was buried in the dark interior of the monumental hill, that is, the pyramid. Here, in the symbolic center of the world, he could rest. Here began his journey to the hereafter—namely, his journey over the celestial ocean, for which huge boats buried next to his pyramid were placed at his disposal. Beginning with King Wenis (end of Dynasty 5, around 2350 BC), the heretofore plain walls of the chambers within the pyramid were decorated with magical spells, both incantations and utterances, the so-called Pyramid Texts. For the first time in history, the deceased was surrounded by spells of wisdom, that is, by the traditional knowledge of his ancestors. Even in death, the king did not want to be without this knowledge, which protected him from the threatening unconsciousness
of the night and the darkness of the tomb, or, as the Egyptians would rather have put it, from falling prey to nonbeing. The spells and images decorating the tomb can be understood as a form of magical knowledge whose apotropaic power protected the deceased from the life-threatening forces of darkness. Embedded in the spiritual tradition of his ancestors, the deceased was assured of the continuity of life, since archaic man feared nothing more than to fall out of the continuous flow of time.
Since this continuity tended to be associated with the course of the sun, the Pyramid Texts often equate the pharaoh with the Sungod. Like Re, the king could emerge from the womb of the sky-goddess Nut in the morning:
because you are Re who came forth from Nut,
who bears Re daily,
and like Re you are born daily.⁷
The motif of the birth of life from the maternal womb continued into Christian times, as a prayer to Mary, which goes back at least to the Middle Ages, shows:
Blessed are you,
for out of your womb a radiance emerged,
shining all over the world announcing your praise…
Be greeted, you, dawn of Salvation,
you, origin of joy…
In the dark burial chamber within the