AFTERLIFE
Historical Encyclopedia

BOOKS OF THE AFTERLIFE

Guidebooks for the Soul's Journey through the Duat

"O you who opens the ways, O you who opens the paths... Open a path for me, that I may pass."
To the Ancient Egyptians, the afterlife was not a vague concept but a real, mapped destination full of dangers. To navigate the demons, gates, and rivers of fire in the Duat (Underworld), the deceased needed a guidebook.

The literature of the afterlife evolved over 3,000 years. It began as exclusive spells for kings carved on pyramid walls and evolved into illustrated papyrus scrolls available to anyone who could afford them. These texts were essentially "survival guides" for eternity.

BOOKS-OF-THE-AFTERLIFE

The Evolution of the Guidebooks

1. The Pyramid Texts (Old Kingdom)

The oldest religious texts in the world (c. 2400 BC). Carved onto the walls of the burial chambers of kings like Unas and Teti at Saqqara.

2. The Coffin Texts (Middle Kingdom)

After the collapse of the Old Kingdom, the afterlife was "democratized." Nobles and officials began painting spells on their wooden coffins.

3. The Book of the Dead (New Kingdom)

Known to the Egyptians as Pert em Hru ("Coming Forth by Day"). Written on papyrus scrolls and placed in the tomb or coffin. It consisted of nearly 200 spells.

The Royal Books of the Underworld

While commoners used the Book of the Dead, the New Kingdom Pharaohs (in the Valley of the Kings) decorated their tombs with highly complex, illustrated texts describing the nightly journey of the sun god Ra.

The Amduat

"That Which Is In the Afterworld." It divides the night into 12 hours. It describes Ra sailing his solar barque through the river of the underworld, battling the chaos serpent Apophis in the 7th hour, and being reborn at dawn.

The Book of Gates

Similar to the Amduat, but focuses on the massive gates separating the hours of the night. Each gate is guarded by a fearsome deity (with names like "Swallower of Sinners"). The deceased must know the name of the guardian to pass.

Other Mystical Texts

Timeline of Funerary Literature

c. 2350 BC: Pyramid Texts appear (Tomb of Unas).
c. 2050 BC: Coffin Texts appear on noble sarcophagi.
c. 1550 BC: Book of the Dead appears on papyrus.
c. 1500 BC: Amduat appears in the Valley of the Kings (Tomb of Thutmose III).
c. 1290 BC: Book of Gates and Book of Caverns (Ramesside Period).

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The text has been fully translated. The most famous version is the Papyrus of Ani, held in the British Museum, which features beautiful color illustrations.
If the heart was heavy with sin, it was eaten by Ammit (a beast part lion, hippo, and crocodile). This resulted in the "Second Death"—complete non-existence, which was the ultimate fear for Egyptians.
Aaru, or the Field of Reeds, was the Egyptian paradise. It was an idealized version of Egypt—lush fields, endless crops, and no sickness—where the deceased lived eternally with their family and the gods.

See the Texts in Person

Visit the colorful tombs of the Valley of the Kings where these books come to life on the walls.